City in Hamadan, Iran
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Shatila, el campo de refugiados palestinos en Líbano, es un símbolo de la fuerza y resiliencia de un pueblo que hace 77 años fue expulsado de su tierra. Allí se produjo una de las masacres más terroríficas de la guerra civil libanesa en los años 80. Allí hace 13 años nació el Palestine Youth Club. Es la historia que contamos con la periodista Txell Feixas y su libro “Aliadas. Las niñas de Shatila desafían las reglas del juego” (Capitan Swing) y con Razan, que fue una de las primeras jugadoras del equipo y es hija de su fundador. Y seguimos contando cómo el deporte derriba muros y la resistencia frente al horror, con Samy Khalil, director de "FOOT, una obra que cuenta la historia del equipo de Palestina de Fútbol y su lucha por el sueño de clasificarse para el Mundial. Y miramos a Gaza para seguir contando los planes de limpieza étnica del estado genocida de Israel y la hambruna a la que somete a la población palestina con Raquel Martí, directora de UNRWA. Más información aquí: https://bit.ly/BaloncestoPalestinaCC1509 Haz posible Carne Cruda: http://bit.ly/ProduceCC
Dr Razan al-Nahhas is an American physician volunteering currently at the Al-Awda Hospital in Deir al Balah in central Gaza.
A vida de Razan nunca mais foi a mesma desde que o marido partiu para os EUA e desapareceu na travessia.Desde então, tudo pesa sobre os ombros dela: três filhos para criar sozinha, um pequeno restaurante que abre aos fins de semana e a luta diária para pagar as contas, fora o fato de não ter tido oportunidade de se despedir. Mas Razan já sobreviveu à guerra na Síria. Ela sabe que não pode parar.A Síria se tornou inviável para viver, então fugir não era escolha, era necessidade. Mesmo Razan não querendo, o plano era ir para a França com o marido. Os dois não tinham filhos ainda.Mas no aeroporto, no Líbano, os sírios foram impedidos de embarcar. Tudo que tinham foi perdido naquelas passagens. Sem saída, o marido encontrou um destino inesperado: o Brasil. Razan não queria vir. Não falava português, não conhecia ninguém. Mas não havia opção.A adaptação foi dura. Um dia, sem geladeira suficiente para guardar a comida que preparou, uma vizinha sugeriu que vendessem. No final do dia, Razan tinha dinheiro na mão e uma esperança nova. Ali ela começou a cozinhar, postar nas redes sociais e, pouco a pouco, conseguiu clientes. Quando abriu a garagem para vender seus pratos, uma fila se formou na porta de casa. Pela primeira vez, ela sentiu que poderia recomeçar.Mas então veio o golpe. Seu marido decidiu ir para os EUA visitar a família. Tentou o visto, mas foi negado. Escolheu a travessia ilegal. A última ligação veio quando ele estava perto da fronteira. Mostrou o rio que atravessaria. Disse que ligaria em dez minutos. E nunca mais ligou.Foram 54 dias de desespero. O celular nunca saía da mão. Qualquer barulho de notificação era um salto no peito. Até que veio a confirmação: ele morreu e foi enterrado com outros 18 em uma cova coletiva, sem nome, sem despedida.Desde então, tudo recai sobre ela. O restaurante ainda abre, mas as contas não fecham. Porque agora, tudo depende dela. Razan não quer ser engolida pela tragédia. O sonho dela continua. Porque cozinhar sempre foi o que a manteve de pé.Para ajudar a Razan, você pode frequentar seu restaurante de comida árabe, que fica na Rua Dr Mário Vicente, 379, Ipiranga. O restaurante funciona aos fins de semana. Para reservas e pedidos, mande uma mensagem no Whatsapp 11 99880.8496.
We look at two high-profile immigration cases under the Trump administration with Doris Meissner, senior fellow and director for the U.S. immigration policy program at Migration Policy Institute. Then, Democrats have struggled to reach a consensus on the best way to counter President Trump during his second term. Matt Bennett of Third Way, a Democratic centrist think tank, and Usamah Andrabi, communications director for the progressive group Justice Democrats, join us to explain how the party should take on Trump. And, Dr. Razan al-Nahhas, an American emergency room physician, is on her second medical mission to Gaza. She speaks to us from the Al-Ahli Hospital in Gaza City, where she's volunteering, about the impact of the latest Israeli airstrikes into Gaza.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
I spoke to my friend Razan who is an activist and creator from Gaza,Palestine. Razan and I speak about the power of protest, activism, and why one should never give up on your goals and dreams. Learn more on today's episode of Dreams Not Memes.
Join our Patreon to get access to exclusive monthly calls: https://www.patreon.com/TheThinkingMuslim It's been a spectacular week in Syria. The world had written off the rebellion that began in 2011, believing Assad, with the support of Russian air power and Iranian militias, had consolidated his rule. In the past weeks, it has been reintegrated into the Arab League, and it just seemed the best the revolution could accept is a rump state in Idlib. There are many who have not followed the developments in Syria over the past 13 years of revolution, and the Thinking Muslim will dedicate some of our shows to reveal the facts and provide important analysis. Today, we have Razan Safoor to give her own account of the Syrian revolution. Razan is a Syrian researcher and an activist. Recently she has been speaking to the international press about developments. So we are honoured to have her with us today.Let me remind all viewers that to help us continue to engage critical thought at this time, Please consider becoming a Patron. https://www.patreon.com/TheThinkingMuslimYou can also support The Thinking Muslim through a one-time donation: https://www.thinkingmuslim.com/DonateListen to the audio version of the podcast:Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/7vXiAjVFnhNI3T9Gkw636aApple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/the-thinking-muslim/id1471798762Sign up to Muhammad Jalal's newsletter: https://jalalayn.substack.comPurchase our Thinking Muslim mug: https://www.thinkingmuslim.com/merch Find us on:Patron. https://www.patreon.com/TheThinkingMuslimTwitter: https://twitter.com/thinking_muslimFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/The-Thinking-Muslim-Podcast-105790781361490Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thinkingmuslimpodcast/Telegram: https://t.me/thinkingmuslim Host: https://twitter.com/jalalaynWebsite Archive: https://www.thinkingmuslim.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
I Irak vil den konservative shiamuslimske koalitionsregering sænke den seksuelle lavalder til ni år – for at beskytte piger mod »umoralske forhold«. Razan Haugaard var 13 år, da hun selv blev gift som barnebrud i Iraks bjerge. Hun mener, at det er alt andet end beskyttelse af pigerne, når Iraks regering nu vil tillade tvangsægteskaber med barnebrude, der er endnu yngre, end hun selv var. I dag fortæller Razan Haugaard om sit liv som barnebrud, hvordan mødet med det danske samfund blev en øjenåbner for hende, og hvordan hun lever med traumet. Gæst: Razan Haugaard, foredragsholder og konsulent på Solrød Jobcenter Vært: Jacob Grosen Tilrettelæggelse og klip: Pernille Skytte Lyddesign: Asbjørn Kjærgaard-Pedersen Foto: Gregers Tycho See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2 000 hectares de forêt primaire, refuge d'une flore et d'une faune unique, sont en danger d'extinction sur la côte est de Madagascar, aux abords du canal des Pangalanes. En cinquante ans, ce territoire a perdu l'essentiel de son couvert forestier, les arbres y sont extrêmement convoités. Cette forêt, appelée Vohibola, ne doit sa survie qu'à une femme : Angélique Razafindrazoary, qui, depuis huit ans, se bat au péril de sa vie contre des trafiquants. De notre correspondante à Madagascar,Des sentiers sableux entourés d'essences d'arbres endémiques et, soudain, un « carnage », comme le nomme Angélique Razafindrazoary. Ce sont des centaines de débris de bois aux couleurs chatoyantes qui jonchent le sol. « C'est vraiment très dur, se désole la défenseuse de la forêt, ce sont des copeaux de bois qui ont été coupés par les braconniers. » Au sol, il y a du nanto, un bois rouge, et aussi du bois jaune, qui appartient à la famille de l'acajou. « Ils ne prennent que le cœur, poursuit Angélique Razafindrazoary, c'est triste quand même, il n'y a pas grand-chose... Deux centimètres, c'est tout. » Et de conclure : « Je ne comprends pas pourquoi ce n'est toujours pas protégé… »Nanto, intsia, ébène, tous ces bois précieux ou semi-précieux sont taillés et débités directement dans la forêt puis transportés de nuit, malgré l'interdiction de naviguer, sur des barques à fond plat par les canaux qui serpentent au milieu de la forêt. Quelques heures plus tard, ils sont revendus à Tamatave, la grande ville côtière, comme bois de construction ou sous forme de charbon.À lire aussiMadagascar en passe de récupérer une cargaison de bois de rose de haute valeur, après 10 ans de procédure pour traficDes défenseurs de la forêt harcelés, piégés et menacés de mortFace à ces coupes répétées dans Vohibola, Angélique a créé l'association communautaire Razan'ny Vohibola en 2016, avec les Tangalamena, les sages des villages, des environs, afin de protéger la forêt. L'association emploie une dizaine d'agents de patrouille. Mais le système a ses limites.« On n'ose pas aller sans [Angélique] dans la forêt, parce que si on y va seuls, on nous tue, dénonce Justin, l'un des agents de patrouille. Personne n'a peur de nous. Ils nous courent après avec une machette et nous, on n'a pas d'arme. Madame Angélique non plus n'est pas armée, mais les trafiquants ont peur d'elle et ils s'enfuient. »Pourtant, malgré son aura, la protectrice de la forêt n'est pas épargnée par les menaces de mort ni les arrestations qui rythment sa vie depuis bientôt une décennie. « Les gardes à vue, on ne les compte même plus, c'est récurrent. C'est notre quotidien. Le souci, c'est qu'il y a vraiment une minorité qui est protégée, au niveau du tribunal. On est tous menacés de mort en permanence. Mes agents ont été tabassés plusieurs fois… » Comme Justin, qui raconte comment plusieurs de ses collègues ont été rudement blessés, par les coups, mais aussi par les pièges qui leur sont tendus régulièrement : « Les braconniers plantent des pics, des espèces de bouts de bois qui dépassent à peine du sol, décrit-il, ils l'enduisent de poison et s'il nous arrive de mettre notre pied dessus, on ne peut plus marcher pendant plusieurs mois tellement la pointe a transpercé notre voute plantaire… »Angélique Razafindrazoary vient d'être sélectionnée pour représenter les lanceurs d'alerte environnementaux par Front Line Defenders, la fondation pour la protection des défenseurs des droits humains. Elle prendra la parole fin octobre prochain à Dublin pour présenter son combat et le contexte peu favorable aux lanceurs d'alerte à Madagascar.À lire aussi«On a voulu me tuer»: à Madagascar, comment défendre les militants de l'environnementUne forêt qui a perdu la moitié de sa superficie en 50 ansTout à coup, en plein enregistrement du reportage, Angélique entend des coups de hache. Elle chuchote, c'est un braconnier en train de couper du bois, elle va essayer de l'intercepter. Ce jour-là, le malfaiteur aura réussi à fuir avant de croiser la Combattante. Celle qui ne se tait pas et ne s'avoue jamais vaincue veut croire qu'elle arrivera à faire classer « sa » forêt primaire en aire protégée en 2025, ce qui représenterait une reconnaissance mondiale de la valeur de Vohibola et du travail accompli. Et ce qui serait également une manière d'obtenir plus de fonds pour conserver une forêt qui a perdu la moitié de sa superficie ces 50 dernières années. Tout un espoir.
Fashion designer, entrepreneur and Great British Sewing Bee judge Patrick Grant has put his money where his seams are with his company Community Clothing and new book 'Less' urging us to stop buying so much rubbish and appreciate fewer, better things. We're taking cheesy to another level with Razan Alsous who came to the UK as a refugee from Syria having lost almost everything. She has since settled in Yorkshire and is now an award-winning maker of squeaky cheese. And Frank Gardner, who twenty years ago was shot six times whilst reporting from Saudi Arabia, remarkably survived and is not only the BBC's Security Correspondent, he's also a bestselling novelist having released his latest book Invasion. All that plus the Inheritance Tracks of The Booker Prize winning Jamaican novelist Marlon James.Presenters: Nikki Bedi and Huw Stephens Producer: Ben Mitchell
In this episode of the Mayman Show get to know Razan Al-Ajmmi, Saudi Arabia's first female skydiver, and listen to her skydiving experiences, future plans, and more.
durée : 00:58:56 - Toute une vie - Dans la nuit du 09 au 10 décembre 2013, l'avocate et activiste syrienne Razan Zaitouneh, figure incontournable de la Révolution syrienne, était enlevée dans la Ghouta avec trois de ses camarades, Waël Hamada, Nazem el-Hammadi et Samira El-Kallil. - invités : Randa Baas Traductrice et interprète; Mazen Darwich Avocate et défenseur des droits humains; Thaer Hijazi Défenseur des droits humains; Hala Kodmani Journaliste franco-syrienne, grand reporter à Libération, écrivaine; Justine Augier Écrivaine et essayiste
In this episode, we will learn from Dr. Razan Hamed, PhD, OTR/L. Dr. Hamed is an occupational therapist who uses Virtual Reality in OT Education. Dr. Hamed is an associate professor and associate director of the Columbia University programs in occupational therapy at Vagelos College of Physicians & Surgeons. She is also the director of the research curriculum for the entry-level MOT program and the mentor of a number of OT Doctorate students. She has been recently elected to the AOTA board of directors, is the founder of the Arab American Occupational Therapy Group, and is a member of the World Federation for Occupational Therapists. She has been a member of the AOTA DEI task force 2020-2021 and an AOTA DEI committee member 2021-2023. She is also the faculty advisor of the Columbia University OT COTAD chapter (Coalition of Occupational Therapy Advocates for Diversity). Her interests are in advocacy for DEI issues in OT education and practice and has published a number of articles on cultural humility and culturally responsive care. Dr. Hamed has been an invited guest speaker to numerous academic institutions to address bias, microaggressions, and cultural humility for OT students and educators.Contact & Resources:People can reach out to me by email at rh2955@columbia.edu. They can also visit my website at dr.razanhamed.com. or follow me on my social media pages such as Instagram @dr.razan_hamedWe are currently trying this VR project again with a new software called Body Swap so we are expanding the project. I am presenting on VR and bias at the AOTA Education Summit in November. Stop by if you're interested to learn more. I am also presenting on cultural humility in OT education at the AOTA Ed Summit in November. Articles on cultural humility: An upcoming article in OT Practice's November issue called Diversity of Grief: How Culture Affects Coping with Loss (stay on the lookout)The Invisible Diversity of Arab Identity: Implications for OT https://www.aota.org/publications/ot-practice/ot-practice-issues/2023/dei-the-invisible-diversity-of-arab-identity#:~:text=Arabs%20come%20from%20more%20than,extremely%2C%20but%20invisibly%2C%20diverse.As always, I welcome any feedback & ideas from all of you or if you are interested in being a guest on future episodes, please do not hesitate to contact Patricia Motus at transitionsot@gmail.com or DM via Instagram @transitionsot THANK YOU for LISTENING, FOLLOWING, DOWNLOADING, RATING, REVIEWING & SHARING “The Uncommon OT Series” Podcast with all your OTP friends and colleagues! Full Episodes and Q & A only available at: https://www.wholistic-transitions.com/the-uncommon-ot-series Sign Up NOW for the Transitions OT Email List to Receive the FREE Updated List of Uncommon OT Practice Settings https://www.wholistic-transitions.com/transitionsot For Non-Traditional OT Practice Mentorship w/ Patricia: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSeC3vI5OnK3mLrCXACEex-5ReO8uUVPo1EUXIi8FKO-FCfoEg/viewform BIG THANKS to our sponsors Picmonic & Truelearn USE DISCOUNT CODE “TransitionsOT” to Score 20% OFF Your Membership Today! Happy Listening Friends! Big OT Love! All views are mine and guests own.
Want to become more heart-centered? There's a new playbook in town! Deb is releasing her first book The Heart-Centered Leadership Playbook: How to Master the Art of Heart in Life & Leadership in September! Details at www.debcrowe.comRazan Badri was born in the United States and has been raised in many different countries around the world from Egypt to the United Arab Emirates to Saudi Arabia to Syria to China and Indonesia. She attended the American University in Dubai and received a BBA in Marketing. In her graduation, she was awarded the President's Award of Student Excellence. Her first job was with Procter & Gamble as a Consumer & Market Knowledge Associate in Dubai, UAE. She then worked for several multinational organizations such as Beiersdorf-NIVEA and Bel Brands in the Marketing, Branding, and Product Development departments. She later was head hunted by a leading advertising agency and worked as a Senior Account Executive handling multinational companies such as Nestle and Reckitt Benckiser.After spending seven years in Marketing and Advertising, she decided to move into Academia. She found her passion to be in this field. She started working with the International School of Chouiefat teaching the SABIS system and then moved on to work with other schools that taught the Cambridge and American Curriculum. In 2012, she became a certified TESOL and TEFL Instructor. She then started teaching English as a Freelance Senior Instructor. Due to her success and the clients' positive feedback, she became the primary Senior Corporate Instructor. In 2014, she decided to become a full-time Corporate Trainer. Since then, she has built her career in Training & Development by developing and executing modules as well as coaching several senior managers who work for large multinational companies globally. She has also trained over 2,500 individuals from over 50 nationalities who work in various industries and has seen them progress in their careers and move up the corporate ladder. In 2021, she began pursuing her Master of Science in Human Resource Management degree at the University of Southern California, one of the top 50 universities in the United States. It is her goal to combine her range of experience with her ability to be a compassionate, enthusiastic, and empathetic HR Professional who will make a positive contribution to organizations. She believes in inspiring people, developing them, and eventually, empowering them.Connect with Razan at:* Instagram: @itsrazanbadri | @myworldofsarah | @leaveamarktoday * https://www.linkedin.com/in/rbadri/ This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit debcrowe.substack.com
Vi hører ofte, at der er store problemer med integrationen: for mange parallelsamfund, for meget kriminalitet og for få i arbejde. Men Regeringens eget såkaldte integrationsbarometer viser et noget andet billede. For andelen af parallelsamfund ser ud til at forsvinde. Vi har i dag 10 i hele landet, mens vi for fem år siden havde 29. Er det udtryk for bedre integration? Det undersøger denne udgave af Reporterne. Medvirkende:Anja Brinch - bestyrelsesformand, FSB TingbjergHelle Lykke Nielsen, lektor ved SDUs center for MellemøststudierHenrik Kokborg, konsulent og indehaver af integrationsinfo.dkVært:Peter MarstalTilrettelæggere:Razan el-NakiebAlexander BrøndumProducer og redaktør:Mille Ørsted
Razan Alsous - Squeeky Cheese - 16 June 2023
Seguimos conectando con las fiestas populares de los barrios de Iruñea. Es el turno de Arrotxapea y hablamos con Imano del Jai Batzorde del barrio. Fertxu invita a la sección cultural a las finalistas del Iruñea Poetry Slam. Orreagak Emeki-Emeki-n Razan al-Nayar palestinarraren istorioa ekartzen digu, soldadu israeldarrak tiroz erahildako sendagile bolondresa. Carramos haciendo repaso ... Leer más
Welcome to another episode of Outrage + Optimism, where we examine issues at the forefront of the climate crisis, interview change-makers, and transform our anger into productive dialogue about building a sustainable future. This week, Christiana, Tom and Paul cut straight to heart of our collective outrage following yet more announcements from Oil and Gas companies disclosing record-breaking profits. The fact that these record breaking profits are juxtaposed with record-breaking temperatures directly causing devastation to people and planet leads to a line-in-the-sand moment for Christiana. Our esteemed guest this week is Her Excellency Razan Khalifa Al Mubarak, UN Climate Change High-Level Champion for COP28. Tune in as the hosts explore with Razan her journey to her current role, her passionate focus and belief on the integral role of nature in tackling the climate crisis and the importance of engaging, understanding and preserving different cultural relationships to our environment. This week's music comes from a wonderful artist called Arya with her superb track: "The Art of Letting Go." NOTES AND RESOURCES H.E. Razan Al Mubarak UN Climate Change High-Level Champion from the COP28 Presidency LinkedIn | Instagram | Twitter | Facebook | Website Arya Instagram | Facebook | Spotify Check out Arya's “Por Amor De Mi Vida” - WATCH: Zen Rapstars of Plum Village - “Little Star” Performance - SIGN UP: Donna Grantis' Culture vs Policy Email List (scroll down to bottom of the page to enter your email) Learn more about the Paris Agreement. It's official, we're a TED Audio Collective Podcast - Proof! Check out more podcasts from The TED Audio Collective Please follow us on social media! Twitter | Instagram | LinkedIn
For the final Future Frames episode, filmmaker Kiriko Mechanicus talks with fellow filmmaker and good friend Razan Hassan, an upcoming documentarist who has recently won the Best Documentary Film award at the Shortcutz Film Festival for her film 'In Between Glass and Walls'. In their tender conversation, Hassan speaks about her teenage love for director Bernardo Bertolucci, the depths of the Syrian new wave, the urge to create from pain, and her upcoming film 'On The Edge Of Life I Saw A Film'. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/lab111/message
Razan Roumany is a medical interpreter who is also trained in remote simultaneous interpretation. Although she specializes in medical interpretation, she has also interpreted for lawyers, teachers, social workers, and even a psychologist in a correctional facility. Having grown up as an Arab-American and hearing her family speak in both French and Arabic is what sparked her passion for interpretation and language learning. She attended the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign where she obtained a masters degree in Translation and Interpretation studies. Razan also obtained a bachelor's degree in Spanish and Pre Med (Pre-physician assistant) from Southeast Missouri State University. She currently works as a Freelance Spanish and Arabic interpreter and a Spanish translator. Her ultimate goal is to work as an Arabic to Spanish simultaneous interpreter.Tune in! Only on the podcast that brings you your stories about our profession. Brand the Interpreter!-----------------------------Connect with Razan RoumanyWebsiteInstagram Thanks for tuning in, till next time!
In this month's episode of Conservation Conversations, Sean is joined by Razan Al Mubarak, President of the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN). Razan shares how the IUCN leverages its constituency of governments, civil organizations, and indigenous communities to guide global policy change. The conversation also touches on Razan's personal experience in conservation as a woman from the UAE, and what diversity and authentic inclusivity bring to the field.
Males ngetiknya asli.. dengerin aja ya ners
Join the MUAA staff as we chat with Marshall Alumnus Razan Khan. He's a Marshall University School of Pharmacy graduate using his degree in a unique way. Dr. Razan Khan- One of the Herd Ep. 009 Transcript Links to Marshall news discussed: Provost search, down to 5 candidates, expect to have one named by start of 2022-2023 academic year: https://www.marshall.edu/news/2022/03/25/five-provost-finalists-to-visit-marshall-university-next-week/Commencement on April 30Dr. Kimberly McFall receives a Fulbright Scholarship: https://www.marshall.edu/news/2022/03/23/marshall-faculty-member-receives-fulbright/Marshall's official move to the Sun Belt conferenceAwards Banquet recapMarshall Rises update
About Deema:I studied IT for the undergrad but I've always been crazy about music, drawing and the visual world..I worked for the biggest part now as an independent creator in photography, film and bilingual texts (mostly prose) basing all my work on self-reflexivity of my lived biography, answering questions or aspiring on taking journeys to answer questions developed throughout my journey on mother earth. So intrigued by life and the living and forever curious to see what's happening out there in the touchable world. Currently doing a full time job and taking care of health, an extra notch, still recovering from an attack in 2018
On February 10th, 2015, Deah Barakat, Yusor Abu-Salha, and Razan Abu-Salha were brutally murdered in a hate crime. Their deaths shook the local community and shockwaves were felt around the world. Their deaths left young Muslims in America feeling lost, scared, and heartbroken. Instead of responding with hate and darkness, the local community responded to this tragic event by providing a source of light for young Muslims and the community at large. With inspiration from Deah, Yusor, and Razan's work during their short lives, the Light House Project was born. The Light House Project provides a safe space physically by giving Muslims a place to meet and be open with their Muslim identity, and it provides a safe space for young Muslims by giving support to projects and programs that young Muslims want to pursue. The Light House Project's mission is to empower Muslim youth by giving them the resources and voice they need to achieve their goals and pursue their passions.
In the latest episode of The Discomfort Practice, it was such a treat to interview journalist and fellow media professional, Irish Syrian journalist and activist, Razan Ibraheem. Razan is a multi-faceted woman with an impressive career. She's had a high profile, passionate ethos-driven career in journalism, spoken to the UN and worked in a news agency focusing on addressing misinformation in the media. She also sits on the Amnesty board in Ireland and her work has led to her being named International Woman of the Year by Irish Tatler in 2016. Because she is also incredibly glamorous and beautiful. We talk about Razan's deeply personal connection to the tragic situation in her native Syria. While studying in Ireland, Syria imploded into civil war, leaving her unexpectedly unable to go back, suddenly classified as a refugee. She turned this discomfort and her considerable energy to volunteering to help refugees in Greece for two years. Razan says “The people I met and the stories I heard from Syrian refugees changed my perspective on life.” Connect with Razan Ibrahim: Razan on LinkedIn Razan on Instagram Connect with Betsy: Betsy on Instagram Betsy on Twitter Betsy on Linkedin Betsy's website Rate, Review, Learn and Share Thanks for tuning into The Discomfort Practice! If you enjoyed this episode, please drop us a five star and written review, follow and share how it has benefited you. Don't forget to tune into our other episodes and share your favorite ones on social media!
Changing our behaviors can be hard. Yet might there be a different way forward? An increasing number of examples show that change can be much easier than we may think. The key to it is gamification. Razan Khawatmi and Hajer Ben Mnawir, two students at the Canadian University of Dubai have created an application known as HalaGreen. In this episode, they join us to discuss how we can tackle the motivational barriers to environmental responsibility by rewarding sustainable actions. - Listen to #Pulse95Radio in the UAE by tuning in on your radio (95.00 FM) or online on our website: www.pulse95radio.com ************************ Follow us on Social. www.facebook.com/pulse95radio www.twitter.com/pulse95radio www.instagram.com/pulse95radio
Razan is by far the biggest movie buff we ever had on the show! Her passion in movies is contagious and her knowledge is impressive. She brings the energy of a thousand suns as she shares her story of her passion including one particular experience with a very special film. Happy Listening Burgers! Link to Alfan Courses: https://bit.ly/alfan-courses-HG 25% Discount code: HAMGEN Learn all the secret tricks that YouTubers use on a daily basis to grow their channels! Check out Razan's YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/c/RazzReviews P.S. We are on Patreon! If you LOVE the Hamburger Generation then please consider supporting us for as little as $1 a month or claim awesome benefits starting from $5. HG Patreon Link: https://www.patreon.com/hamburgergeneration Every dollar contributed will go a long way at making us happy and at keeping the podcast sustainable.
I denne udgave af Dagens Nyheder skal det allerførst handle om læreruddannelsen. Lærerstuderendes Landskreds råber nemlig vagt i gevær. De mener, at optaget på læreruddannelsen er alt for lav, og det kan få konsekvenser i fremtiden.Hvert år ender 5000 sager hos husklagenævnet, og derfor er der lidt gode råd til boligsøgende. Vi slutter i Tunesien, hvor der har været lidt politisk tumult siden premierministeren blev fyret i søndags, inden vi runder avisforsiderne. Vært: Razan el-NakiebTilrettelægger: Jonas Emil JakobsenMedvirkende: Jan Blicher Grunnet, advokat med speciale i lejeret og stifter af virksomheden Lejka. Caroline Holdflod Nørgaard, forperson for Lærerstuderendes Landskreds. Rikke Havbølle, ph.d. i mellemøststudier med speciale i Tunesien.Redaktør: Charlotte Bjerrekær
I Dagens Nyheder kigger vi på Pride Paraden, der løber af stablen for 26'ende gang i Budapest i Ungarn. Vi taler med en repræsentant for LGQBT-miljøet i Ungarn og undersøger, hvorfor det er særligt vigtigt med Pride i år. Vi skal også høre om håndboldherrerne, der skal spille deres første kamp ved OL, men hvordan er deres chancer egentlig? Til slut kigger vi selvfølgelig på avisforsider.Vært: Razan el-NakiebTilrettelæggere: Anna Munch Heydorn og Jonas Emil JakobsenRedaktør: Charlotte Bjerrekær
I dagens udgave af Dagens Nyheder kigger vi først og fremmest på OL. Faklen bliver tændt i dag og legene går for alvor i gang, men har Danmark muligheder for at hive medaljer med hjem?Så handler det også lidt om Haiti, for de skal i dag begrave deres præsident, der blev myrdet i starten af juli, men hvad er det lige, der er op og ned i den sag?Til slut skal vi selvfølgelig kigge på avisforsider.Vært: Razan el-NakiebTilrettelægger: Jonas Emil JakobsenRedaktør: Charlotte Bjerrekær
Mit ihrem Einstehen für Menschenrechte im syrischen Bürgerkrieg machte sich Aktivistin Razan Zeitouneh Feinde auf allen Seiten. 2013 wurde sie entführt. Von wem, wohin und warum, hat das Investigativteam der DW recherchiert.
Razan Ibraheem is an Irish-Syrian journalist and activist. She first came to Ireland to do her MA at the University of Limerick and ending up unable to return home after the war started in her native Syria. Razan worked for several years with the Storyful news agency and recently joined Kinzen as a senior editorial analyst researching misinformation on social media. Part of her past work has included contributing additional research to The New York Times visual investigations team that won a Pulitzer Prize in 2020 for a series of stories about Russian President Vladimir Putin's regime. Razan's deeply personal connection to the tragic situation in Syria prompted her to volunteer on two occasions to help refugees arriving in the Greek islands. Razan is increasingly recognised as a trailblazing force for change and is a recipient of an International Woman of the Year award by Irish Tatler.
Hvordan er det å oppleve krig? Hvordan er det å være flyktning? Hvordan kan traumer komme til uttrykk i hverdagen? Og hva er egentlig PTSD? Med oss i dag har vi Razan Zamazam og psykolog Cecilie Kolflaath Larsen.Razan Zamazams familie kommer fra Palestina. Hun kom til Norge som flyktning i 2014, etter at familien hadde bodd i krigsherjede Syria i tre år, der hun blant annet mistet faren sin. Hun har utgitt to bøker; en på arabisk kalt “خفايا الروح “ og en på norsk kalt “Halvt norsk halvt arabisk”Cecilie Kolflaath Larsen har arbeidet som psykolog i 15 år. Gjennom karrieren har hun hatt fokus på vold og traumer, og hun har en særskilt interesse for strukturell vold, krig, diktaturer og statlig overgrep på mennesker. Idag jobber hun blant annet i et spisskompetanseteam innen vold og konflikt i familievernet. Hennes interesser for vold og krig kan ha sammenheng med hennes egen familiehistorie; faren vokste opp under andre verdenskrig i Narvik, og besteforeldrene satt i konsentrasjonsleir.Da er det bare å trykke på play for å lære mer!
Joe and I both watched the documentary Gaza Fights for Freedom, directed by Abbey Martin https://youtu.be/HnZSaKYmP2s . We discuss some of the films biases but still believe it provides an important view into the on the ground conditions of the Palestinian people and the protestors on the border of Gaza and Israel. We do not believe stone throwing should qualify as a form of 'non-violent protest'. Environmental Organizations are not living up to their billing. Joe and I discuss our personal qualms with so-called 'Green' organizations that have taken public stances against the advancement of nuclear power because of it's inherent dangers. Nuclear Energy has long been propagandized against by the coal and petroleum industries, its no coincidence that Green Peace, the EDF, and the Sierra-Club all received the majority of their funding from petroleum producers like Exxon Mobile and Chevron. Joe and I debate the efficacy of vaccinating people in insufficient numbers to achieve heard immunity. Is the Terminator already here? If you are a Libyan Rebel Solider the answer is yes and its surprisingly not an American creation. The Kargu-2 military drone was designed with Artificial Intelligence to "attack targets without requiring data connectivity between the operator and the munition: effectively a true fire, forget and find capability. Then drone was built by STM a defense company based in Turkey. A report from a U.S. government national laboratory concluded that the Wuhan lab-leak hypothesis is plausible and deserves further investigation. the Study was prepared by the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in May 2020 and drawn on by the State Department when it conducted an inquiry into the origins of the COVID-19 virus. The battle for a more just and equitable society continues, and we will keep fighting! https://www.reddit.com/r/Americandualism/ --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/americandualism/message
My name is alma. I study graffiti. I used to be an artist. I want to become a pop singer (not really because I cannot sing or hold a tune, but I dream of the attention). I live with Rocca, the cat, and hoard plants (at present, I think i have 28). Razan is one of my best friends.Here is a more formal academic biography:alma khasawnih researches access to the street in post-colonial and settler-colonial nation-states as a site of understanding and articulating access to citizenship. alma's research projects examine ephemeral visual culture production (graffiti, murals, and other forms of street/public art) as stand-alone material objects that orient, disorient, and reorient feminist debates on social political-cultural movements within urban geographies and the phenomenology of erasure, co-optation, and resistance. alma is invested in examining how urban beautification projects and cleansing public spaces are part of authoritarian visual culture and politics of respectability that aims at policing minoritized bodies in public spaces.alma earned a Ph.D. in Feminist Studies from the University of Washington, Seattle; an M.A. in Community Art Education from Rhode Island School of Design, Providence; and a BS in Environmental Policy and Behavior from the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.You can contact Alma via her emailalmakhasawnih[at]gmail.com
On the 10th anniversary of the Syrian Revolution, we interview exiled Syrian-Palestinian scholar-activist Razan Ghazzawi. More info at jetpack.zoob.net
Dr. Jane Goodall has an insightful and meaningful conversation with her good friend, Her Excellency Razan Khalifa Al Mubarak, the Managing Director of the Mohamed bin Zayed Species Conservation Fund. Razan has devoted her life to advocating for biodiversity protection solutions working both with governments all over the world and also with companies in the private sector. Jane and Razan reminisce over their eight years of friendship and collaboration, from establishing Roots & Shoots in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) to traveling to the desert to learn about the conservation efforts started by the first Sheikh and Founder of the UAE, Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan. Together, they discuss the importance of finding solutions that benefit communities and how modern society, just like nature, is most resilient when it is diverse. Razan distinguishes the crucial need to fight for action for both biodiversity and climate change and she shares a quote from one of her favorite authors, Elif Shafak, that echoes both her and Jane's perspective on the future of this fight: “We need pessimism of the mind and optimism of the heart.” At the End of the Rainbow: Stay to the end of the episode to hear a rare archival clip of Jane reflecting on our planet's two "lungs." See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
The American Community School of Abu Dhabi.
Get to know Razan Alazzouni in this episode
Welcome to StoneWaterZen TalksThis talk on case 43 of the Book of Equanimity 'Razan's Arising and Vanashing' was recorded during the Stonewaterzen Online Zazenkai in February 2021.For more information about Stomewaterzen, online retreats and our weekly schedule on zoom please visit our website https://www.stonewaterzen.org/If you find these talks valuable please consider supporting Stonewaterzen by donatingTo donate simply use the link belowhttps://www.paypal.com/donate?hosted_button_id=VME4SMQZC6CWUWe rely on your support to continue sharing this life changing practice.
Vidste du, at man som skilsmisseforælder kan afbryde den anden forælders kontakt til deres fælles barn ved fx at beskylde sin x-partner for at have begået vold - selv hvis det ikke er gennem en retssag?I denne podcast undersøger vi det, der ligner en metode, nogle forældre bruger, for at vinde en samværssag om det fælles barn. Du får svar på, hvad den går ud på, og hvordan det overhovedet kan foregå.NB: Vi har efter podcastens udgivelse været i kontakt med modparten i den konkrete sag, der omtales. Vedkommende holder fast i sin side af sagen.Ann lindgård, juristMichael Bæklev, forælderCaroline Adolphsen, lektor, cand.jur. og PhD i familieret, Aalborg UniversitetTilrettelægger og Vært: Razan el-NakiebMedhjælper/tilrettelægger: journalistpraktikant Josefine Jørgensen Redaktør: Joachim Næshave
I dette interview møder Trine Askholm Razan Hougaard. Razan er forfatter, rådgiver, mor og rollemodel. Men hun er først og fremmest et menneske, der aldrig har mistet modet og viljen til at leve og gøre en forskel. Da Razan bliver gift som 13-årig, troede hun, at hun blev bortadopteret. Hun var slet ikke klar over, hvad et ægteskab kunne være, og hvad det indebar. Hun var et barn både inden i og udenpå. Razan mødte ikke sin mand før efter brylluppet, og kort tid efter blev hun mor for første gang. Som 17-årig kom hun til Danmark med sin mand og to små børn. De var flygtet fra Sadam Husseins regime til fods henover bjergene til Iran og herfra videre til Danmark. Ved ankomsten kunne Razan med det samme mærke, at det her land var et sted hun gerne ville være en del af. Hun var nysgerrig på at lære kulturen og sproget. I dag er det mere end 30 år siden hun flygtede fra Irak, men angsten og følelsen af svigt følger hende fortsat. Og alligevel har hun aldrig mistet modet til at komme videre og lever i dag som en ægte rollemodel, der hjælper kvinder, der kommer til Danmark fra andre kulturer, med at blive bedre integreret.Vært og tilrettelæggelse: Trine AskholmProduktion og klip: Damn PodcastLæs mere om diversitet og rollemodeller i dansk erhvervsliv på innovatorq.com og find os på Instagram på @innovatorq
My dearest friend Razan, who has been on multiple episodes of my multiple shows, sat down with me this week to talk about what's been going on with her new pet, Bruce. We also discuss the great NBA player whom we know so much about, Kevin Love, and how Kansas high schools need to have better inclusion and diversity. As always, thank you for listening and be sure to follow this podcast on social media: Instagram/TikTok @inperspective_podcastTwitter/YouTube: @Put It In Perspective Podcast
This weeks episode features Razan Mualla (@razanxmualla). Razan is a 21 year old blogger and YouTuber. With over 30k followers, she serves as an inspiration to young girls who are looking into wearing the hijab and finding their own style. I loved chatting with Razan about her first memory of the hijab and sharing advice to young muslim girls. In times like the ban of the hijab, we need to remind ourselves of the power and grace of OUR hijab. Let this only make you want to wear it even more and remember the very first time you put it on. - Instagram: @journalhijabi⠀ - Hosted and created by @sereenqader⠀⠀ - Email: journalhijabi@gmail.com⠀⠀ - Guests Instagram: @razanxmualla⠀ ⠀ ⠀ ⠀ ⠀ ⠀ Thank you guys for tuning in and spending this time to listen to this episode. If you could take one second to support this podcast by sharing it and leaving an honest review, it would mean so much to me and help us to reach many different audiences to spread our stories about the hijab! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/journalhijabi/support
University of Memphis student Razan Hadidi calls John to chat about her award winning Treasure Tea Box as well her as future plans in the sixth episode of our summer series.
Hello deer readers! Join us on a spiritual journey with extra special guest Razan, a professional past life reader. @razan.kaur On instagram. We dive deep into past lives and break through fear. We learn where Leo is actually from. Maybe you're not from here either?! Tune in and tune on to find out! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/thevenuslucifereffect/support
This is the sixth edition of the Free City Radio podcast, it includes interviews, as well as music contributions from awesome friends in different parts of the world. In this episode we hear from Sam Schuette who works as a cook at Resilience Montreal, a frontline support organization working with people struggling with poverty and homelessness, particularly urban indigenous people, within the context of the pandemic. https://resiliencemontreal.com Also we hear from activist, filmmaker and professor Razan AlSalah who speaks about the impacts of the pandemic on the public health sector in Lebanon and the ways this impacts economically marginalized people. Also Razan speaks about this current context within the framework of recalling the mass protests for social and economic justice that have been taking place in Lebanon over the past year, Razan specifically points to the campaign to Bisri Valley campaign. info : https://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/features/lebanese-dam-project-stirs-earthquake-fears-environment-concerns-190807082828083.html https://www.facebook.com/savebisri I also speak with Samin Abhar who is a medical student in Victoria, B.C. Samin speaks about the importance of governments supporting the public healthcare system in this context of crisis, but also beyond, as a way to avert and prepare for future medical emergencies that touch society. Follow-up on a previous episode of the podcast I spoke with Mohammed who is a night shift worker and baker at Tim Hortons outside Parc metro in Montreal, part of an effort to highlight frontline, long wage workers within the context of the pandemic. In response to the signing of an arms agreement between Canada and Saudi Arabia I speak with author Yves Engler who has written numerous critical books on Canadian foreign policy and recently published an article on this Canada-Saudi arms deal. https://canadiandimension.com/articles/view/canada-embraces-saudi-monarchy-again Featured in this podcast musically as two theme tracks, "Hope' by the Dirty Three, and a track by VOID released on @villainrecords Also I feature a track by Tracy Chapman, "Heaven Here on Earth," a track by Anarchist Mountains @anarchistmountains released on ΠΑΝΘΕΟΝ in Russia, also a track by Bas Relief, Treyf, from their album, QTT8, also a track from Anne Waldman's upcoming album produced by Devin Brahja Waldman @brahja, and finally a track by the great George Wassouf. Free City Radio is hosted by Stefan @spirodon Christoff and also broadcasts on @radiockut in Montreal.
In this episode, Syrian born journalist Razan Ibraheem spoke to Róisín Ingle about adjusting to this new life under lockdown and the importance of maintaining a routine each day. With the first case of coronavirus confirmed in Syria nearly three weeks ago, Razan discusses the disastrous impact the outbreak may have on her home country. Also, Irish TV presenter Angela Scanlon joined Róisín from her home in London which she shares with her husband Roy and their two year old daughter Ruby. She spoke to Róisín about the power of gratitude, the joys of baking bread with her mum over Instagram and her brand new RTE chat show, ‘Ask Me Anything’ which like lots of things is "up in the air at the moment".
In this episode, I welcome Razan, a Syrian director that came to The Netherlands as a refugee couple of years ago. Even though we shared a similar story, hearing certain things from a female perspective was refreshing and informative to say the least. We talked about feminism in Europe and Razan wanted to add that she doesn’t mean to underestimate the issue, but rather comparing it to the rights that Arabic females are fighting for, where after this comparison life here feels so luxurious. Our conversation was full of laughs and memories. Hope you will enjoy this :)
In today's episode, Razan Altiraifi joins the podcast to talk about her path to a career in architecture.
There have been some unlikely and, let’s face it, unwanted comebacks over the years. The Librarians, starring Christian Kane, got a second series in 2014… Liverpool somehow managed to beat AC Milan to the Champions League in 2005… but neither of these can hold a candle to Be Grand, which has returned in glorious fashion for a second series despite nobody in their right mind wanting that. And to kick things off, we’re delighted to bring you a very special guest indeed. Razan Ibraheem is a journalist whose work has appeared in The Guardian and is a regular contributor on politics for Irish TV and radio. Though based in Ireland, Razan was born in Syria and has dedicated her work towards spreading awareness of and educating people about the ongoing Syrian War as well as highlighting the plight of refugees driven from their homes as a result of the conflict. She has spoken about this at the United Nations and was awarded International Woman of the Year by Irish Tatler. Before tackling the Leaving Cert, Razan chats to Andy about what it was like growing up in Syria, what needs to happen to help the people of the battered nation and the unforeseen consequences of having a picture of Ronan Keating at home. Be Grand is back and there’s nobody better to reassure us that things might actually end up okay than Razan and her brilliant dedication to helping others. https://twitter.com/IbrahRazan https://twitter.com/begrandpod https://twitter.com/gottheshift
Our host Niamh Maher is joined by Syrian journalist Razan Ibraheem on this week's episode of Girls With Goals. Razan tells us about growing up in Syria, how she made Ireland her home, the heartbreak of war and what we can do to help!
This is our first episode talking to a food producer; I want to do more of these as they are the beginning of the journey for many food businesses. Razan Alsous is the perfect person to start with, Razan came over to the UK in 2012 after fleeing war-torn Syria. She has overcome many challenges to start her own business making 'Halloumi' cheese in the U.K. We discuss the challenges of being a refugee in a new country, with limited funds and limited grasp of the English language but a great idea and great ingredients. Want to find out more about Yorkshire Dama Cheese; Website | Facebook Page | Twitter
Razan Al Sarraf is a Kuwait-born visual artist living in Brooklyn, New York. Through painting she covers the social, religious and political climate of the Middle East. Her project depicting portraits of 100 ISIS terrorists' portraits has gained her world-wide recognition. We talked about her work, living in Kuwait, shedding identity labels, what she wants people to learn from her artwork, and much more. Check out Razan: http://www.razanalsarraf.com/ https://www.instagram.com/razanalsarraf/ Razan's Recommended Artists: www.instagram.com/azizmutawa www.instagram.com/ferrah.s www.instagram.com/mohen.aziz.arts www.instagram.com/mahaalasaker Song in this episode: Sons of Yusuf - One Time Support TVTV on Patreon: www.patreon.com/thevoyagesoftimvetter
Genjo Marinello Osho gave this Teisho on the 5th day of Spring Sesshin 2019. This talk explores how we are all pushed around by the surface waves of arising and vanishing, coming and going, life and death. The Zen solution is to cultivate a deep keel.
What is the world's first digital life experience library and how did it start? Get an inside look into the mental health movement that is seen by many as the most promising low threshold services out there to solve the rising mental health crisis. Hear from one of the most viewed video interviews, Razan Zamzam, interview and THA head of marketing Maxie Earle, and the founder Jimmy Westerheim. Learn how Jimmy and his friend Kumi took to the streets of Oslo with a camera in 2016, to interview people they had never met, about their life's toughest challenge... Hear how these first 30 interviews spiked The Human Aspect from idea to the global movement it is today, with more than 380 interviews from former Prime Minister Kjell Magne Bondevik, Tech guru Silvija Seres and Artists Chris Medina, to ordinary people with a story to share. In addition, how having your story viewed by hundred-thousands of people effect you as a person and how it can impact all those people out there watching it, that feel alone. Plus, how it is to be part of the THA family that has developed this over the last 2,5 years. Enjoy!Support the show (https://www.facebook.com/fund/TheLifeExperienceLibrary/)
Kim Tserkezie explores how migrants have used their entrepreneurial skills to become part of British communities, and finds out whether the experiences of successful businesses accrued over generations still resonate with migrants arriving today. Kim begins her journey by the golden sands of England’s North East coast, where we hear the Italian family history of England’s ice cream champions. Michael Minchella shares the experiences and struggles of generations of his family setting up and running their seaside business. Some 75 years later, Michael now leads their much loved ice cream empire. We then head to North Yorkshire to meet one of the 8000 Syrian refugees who have arrived in the UK in recent years. Razan, a pharmacist from Syria, explains how she is making a new life as a traditional Yorkshire cheese maker. Kim also travels over the border to Edinburgh to meet Talal and Nour, two Syrians who met for the first time in Edinburgh and went on to recreate a facsimile of the baker’s shop that Noor was forced to leave behind when fleeing Aleppo.
How students have found their passion
On this episode we're joined by Razan Abdin Adnani for a conversation on the Montessori approach to teaching and learning, how we define discipline, and what we can do as educators to affirm the identities of all our students. Razan is an Arab-American and she discusses how it feels to often be labeled as an 'other' in our country and what impact she feels that has on students who are also labeled as 'others'. Razan talked about the isolation and pain that students feel when they don't have teachers who look like them or understand their culture and why it's so important for teachers to their students and communities to bridge the cultural gaps. She also describes the holistic nature of the Montessori classroom and how discipline in these classrooms represents our actions rather than punishment through authority. Montessori strives to be an environment that is more reflective of our society in its structure. We were honored to have Razan on the podcast and here's how you can connect with her: Instagram: @oustadarazan Twitter: @razanabdin www.razanabdin.com Thank you so much for listening and supporting our podcast! We launched our first fundraiser as a non-profit to help us continue to provide our services and add value to the teaching craft at no charge. Our fundraiser is called 1:1 and we're asking for people to donate $12 a year to support education and our programs. If you'd like to help click the link below: give.classy.org/theledproject --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/valueaddsvalue/support
Farris Barakat lost his brother, sister in law and her sister in a brutal hate crime three years ago in North Carolina. Farris tells the story of growing up as an American, losing his family to a heinous crime and choosing forgiveness over hate in response. I hope that this interview continues to carry on the incredible legacy of our fellow Americans Deah, Yusor and Razan.
On June 1st Razan al-Najjar sat off, as she had done before, to serve her land and her people. She was a self-educated, first responder in one of the most dangerous places in the world She was exhausted. The day before she came home covered in blood, and it was Ramadan, so she was fasting. But her bravery and passion could not be extinguished. She was resilient, brave Sadly, as many of you know, she was murdered that day. Shot by an Israeli sniper, who until now remains free and uncharged. Razzan was only twenty-one years old. As soon as it happened, I knew that it was essential to share Razan’s story. She stood for female empowerment, education, peace and an end to occupation and genocide, so I reached out to her family In this week’s episode of SwissCast, I talk with Dalia al-Najjar, Razan’s cousin. In an emotional interview, we discussed life under Israeli occupation, what it feels like to be Gazan, Razan’s life and legacy and how we can support her foundation for empowering and educating young girls in Gaza @launchgood She was exhausted; the day before she came home covered in blood; it was Ramadan; she was fasting, but her drive and passion could not be extinguished. She was resilient, strong and she loved life Sadly, as many of you know, she was murdered that day. Shot by an Israeli sniper, who until now remains free and uncharged. She was only twenty-one years old As soon as it happened, I knew that it was essential to share Razzan’s story. She stood for female empowerment, education, peace and an end to occupation and genocide. I was worried that her legacy would be manipulated, retold and reconstructed to justify her death. So I reached out to her family to get her story In this week’s episode of SwissCast, I talk with Dalia al-Najjar, Razzan’s cousin. In an emotional interview, we discussed life under Israeli occupation, what it feels like to be Gazan, Razan’s life and legacy and how we can support her foundation for empowering and educating young girls in Gaza @launchgood
Christopher Hill talks with British University in Dubai's postgraduate student Razan Neweiran about her experience working on a research project in the UAE. The conversation addresses key issues and challenges faced by all researchers and provides an insight and discussion about the journey and experience. Razan offers her perspective, highlights what she has gained from the experience and offers advice for prospective research students to consider.
bercakap-cakap bersama Razan, seorang storyteller yang aktif di storial.co tentang storytelling dan bertumbuh bersama cerita
This emotional spoken word is in tribute to Razan al-Najjar and every innocent Palestinian soul killed fighting for their rights. Scroll down for the video and full lyrics. Razan al-Najjar was a Palestinian medic from Gaza who was brutally killed by an Israeli sniper as she heroically tended to the wounds of injured protesters. Though she was clearly wearing a white medic coat, Zionist occupation forces still pulled the trigger from a sniper which pierced her chest leaving her coat soaked in blood. Razan al-Najjar isn’t the first innocent civilian to be killed by the genocidal forces of Israel, and certainly will not be the last until Palestine is free from the occupiers. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/themuslimvibe/message
Jess & Jamal discuss the murder of Palestinian medic Razan al-Najjar in Gaza. Instead of apologizing, Israeli officials claimed that the medic was acting as a human shield for Hamas when she was shot dead by Israeli soldiers in Gaza.
The killing of 21 year old Palestinian medic, Razan al-Najjar, by Israeli soldiers on 1st June, dominated global headlines over the weekend. Tragically, Razan was just one of dozens of Palestinians killed every year by Israeli militia. On this week's show, John Wight and Professor Kamel Hawwash, discuss this incident in its broader context...
On today's episode of Loud & Clear, Brian Becker and John Kiriakou are joined by journalist and filmmaker Dan Cohen and Miko Peled, the author of “The General’s Son - A Journey of an Israeli in Palestine” and the new book "Injustice: The Story of the Holy Land Foundation Five.”People around the world yesterday mourned the assassination of a 21-year-old Palestinian medic, Razan al-Najjar, who was shot and killed by Israeli snipers as she was tending to wounded protestors. Razan is the second health worker killed by Israeli snipers, and one of more than 100 Palestinians killed in the past few weeks. The Israeli military said they would conduct an investigation into Razan’s death. Also, today marks the 51st anniversary of the Six Day War, which was a quick and decisive victory of Israel over its Arab neighbors and which greatly expanded the territory under Israeli control. Tuesday’s weekly series “False Profits—A Weekly Look at Wall Street and Corporate Capitalism with Daniel Sankey” continues looking at the top economic issues of the day, including wealthy people like Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz running for office, the various trade wars, and when the next recession will be. Financial policy analyst Daniel Sankey joins the show. The Iranian Government yesterday informed the United Nations nuclear watchdog that it planned to begin the process of increasing its capacity to enrich uranium. The Iranian decision was taken in light of the US withdrawal from the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, or Iran Nuclear Deal. Brian and John speak with Mohammad Marandi, an expert on American studies and postcolonial literature who teaches at the University of Tehran. President Trump yesterday disinvited the entire Philadelphia Eagles football team from a White House event celebrating their Super Bowl victory because a handful of players were not planning to attend. The President was offended that individual players were boycotting the event and he released a statement criticizing them and alluding to the controversy over kneeling during the national anthem. Racial justice activist Candace McKinley joins the show. The Pentagon is increasing spending on a secret research effort to use artificial intelligence to help anticipate the launch of a nuclear-capable missile, as well as to track and target mobile missile launchers. If the effort is successful, such computer programs will be able to think for themselves. Dr. Lawrence Korb, a senior fellow at the Center for American Progress, a senior adviser to the Center for Defense Information, and formerly director of national security studies at the Council on Foreign Relations in New York and Assistant Secretary of Defense during the Reagan Administration, joins Brian and John. Prosecutors representing Special Counsel Robert Mueller yesterday accused former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort of witness tampering. They say that Manafort has attempted to influence the testimony of two witnesses in his upcoming criminal trial, and they are asking a judge to revoke his bail and send him to jail. Daniel Lazare, a journalist and author of “The Frozen Republic,” “The Velvet Coup,” and “America's Undeclared War,” joins the show.The Supreme Court, by a 7-2 vote, ruled yesterday that a Colorado cakeshop owner did not have to make a wedding cake for a same-sex couple. The ruling was narrowly written and specific only to this case, but experts believe that it will encourage other people to file anti-civil rights cases based on religious freedom arguments. Brian and John speak with Jerame Davis, the executive director of Pride at Work, the LGBT constituency group of organized labor.
Kennelijk schoot de Hamas van achter deze ongewapende hulpverlener, raketten op onschuldige Israelische scherpschutters...
L’Italia giallo - verde ha alleati? E quali? Varato in Italia il primo governo cosiddetto populista gli analisti si interrogano su quella che sarà la collocazione dell'Italia nello scacchiere internazionale. Appare evidente che il governo gialloverde sia schierato su posizioni euroscettiche tendenti a rinegoziare i trattati europei che soffocano l'economia italiana a partire da quel Fiscal Compact per arrivare fino ai parametri di Maastricht. Ciò che maggiormente interroga gli analisti è se un paese debole come l'Italia e dipendente dal Quantitative Easing della BCE per tenere in vita il proprio sistema bancario, abbia la forza per rinegoziarli con qualche chance di successo magari grazie all'aiuto di qualche alleato insperati. Non si può non notare che indizi su possibili alleati del governo gialleverde ci sono ed arrivano dagli Stati Uniti. Infatti anche la stampa italiana ha pubblicato che l'improvviso abbassamento degli spread tra Bund e BTP è dovuto agli acquisti di giganti finanziari americani quali Bridgewater, Citi, Jp Morgan, Blackrock, Pimco e Prudential. Un'azione che non può non apparire come coordinata e tendente a dare sostegno all'Italia. Inoltre non si può non notare un cambiamento di valutazione da parte della stampa finanziaria USA: per esempio Bloomberg ha pubblicato un pezzo nel quale sostiene la necessità di un piano B di uscita dall'Euro per l'Italia. Per non parlare poi di un report di JPMorgan nel quale si spiega come per l'Italia sia conveniente l'uscita dall'Euro piuttosto che continuare a rimanerci a costo di continui piani d'austerità che la condannano ad una perenne stagnazione economica. Insomma non è azzardato dire che il governo italiano stia ottenendo un sostegno potentissimo e a pieno spettro da parte del mondo finanziario americano. Sostegno che non può essere casuale per la tempistica con cui arriva e lascia ipotizzare che gli USA vogliono utilizzare l'Italia nella battaglia sul commercio internazionale in corso contro la Germania. Donald Trump vuole bloccare l'invasione di merci provenienti dalla Germania e Roma potrebbe essere il jolly che gli farà vincere la partita.L’Europa è in crisi anche per conto suo Il nuovo governo italiano potrebbe avere l'effetto di una bomba per il sistema europeo. Un punto, questo, che mette d'accordo figure molto distanti tra loro, come l'ex consigliere di Donald Trump, Steve Bannon, e lo speculatore George Soros, ognuno dei quali, tuttavia, ne trae conclusioni diverse. "Roma oramai è il centro della politica mondiale. Quello che sta accadendo qui è straordinario", sostiene Steve Bannon in un'intervista per La Repubblica, in cui ammette di aver avuto un ruolo, seppur "non determinante", nella decisione di Salvini di unirsi a Di Maio. "Determinante e' quello che hanno fatto gli italiani", precisa l'ex funzionario Usa: “Avete dato un colpo al cuore alla bestia dell’Europa, delle capitali straniere, dei grandi media stranieri". L'avvento al potere dei populisti, a suo avviso, crescerà e porterà cambiamenti rivoluzionari, mentre Macron e la Merkel "cadranno come birilli". Uno scenario che, secondo lo speculatore George Soros, intervistato dal Corriere della Sera, si potrebbe ancora evitare, a patto che l'Unione Europea, invece di cercare di impartire lezioni, "si chieda che cos'ha da imparare da questo rimescolamento delle carte in Italia". Per ristabilire la fiducia, afferma Soros, "Bruxelles deve cambiare i regolamenti esistenti e pagare gran parte di quanto serve per integrare e sostenere i migranti, che sono bloccati in Italia in quantità così fuori proporzione". "Non è possibile né desiderabile ricollocarli in altri Paesi a forza", spiega Soros, aggiungendo che tra i numerosi problemi che l'Unione Europea si trova ad affrontare, "l’Italia è diventato il più pressante, perché ne minaccia i valori fondanti". Persino il Financial Times, lo stesso che parlava di "nuovi barbari", sostiene, ora, che sarà la mancanza di riforme a far andare in pezzi l’Eurozona, e non il nostro Paese, che in 20 anni di mala gestione da parte dei partiti di centro sinistra e di centro destra, "ha accettato regole europee profondamente contrarie agli interessi italiani”.Vienna: "Stop alle sanzioni contro la Russia" "E' ora di rispondere ai dazi imposti da Donald Trump, togliendo le sanzioni alla Russia.” A dirlo, in un'intervista di sabato 2 giugno, e' il vice-cancelliere austriaco Heinz-Christian Strache, leader del Partito della Liberta', parte della coalizione di governo. “Ho sempre messo in guardia dal portare la Russia nelle braccia della Cina”, ha sottolineato Strache. Sulla stessa linea, il Cancelliere Sebastian Kurz: "Gli USA stanno diventando un partner commerciale sempre piu' inaffidabile". Il tutto alla vigilia della visita a Vienna del presidente russo Vladimir Putin, prevista per domani martedi' 5 giugno. Le sanzioni imposte alla Russia dal 2014 sono costate all'Austria piu' di 2 miliardi di euro in esportazioni. A far eco a Vienna potrebbe essere il neo governo italiano Lega-5Stelle.Mosca: Contromisure verso Washington e i suoi alleati http://publication.pravo.gov.ru/Document/View/0001201806040032?index=3&rangeSize=1In risposta alle sanzioni economiche di Washington, il presidente russo Vladimir Putin ha firmato la nuova legge sulle contromisure contro le azioni ostili degli Stati Uniti e dei suoi alleati. Il documento era stato approvato dalla Duma il 22 maggio e dal Consiglio della Federazione Russa il 30 maggio scorso. Ora il governo ha il potere di introdurre sulla base della decisione del presidente russo varie contromisure, tra cui restrizioni a import ed export, a condizione che non si applichino a beni vitali non fabbricati in Russia e in altri paesi. Il governo potrà annullare le contromisure qualora le cause vengano meno. Il sangue di Gaza non fa rumore "Non era una pallottola vagante. Mia figlia e' stata deliberatamente uccisa." Queste le parole della madre di Razan Al-Najar, l'infermiera di 21 anni uccisa dai soldati israeliani a est di Khan Younis,Gaza, durante le proteste di venerdi' 1 giugno, mentre prestava assistenza ai feriti. "Cercavamo di portare via i feriti dalla zona di confine”, racconta l'infermiera Lamya Najjar, "quando i soldati hanno dapprima lanciato gas lacrimogeni e poi sparato proiettili a caso. Uno di questi ha colpito Razan al petto ed e' uscito dalla schiena". Almeno altri tre membri della Mezzaluna Rossa sono stati feriti. Israele ha dovuto ordinare un'inchiesta. L'Articolo 24 della Convenzione di Ginevra tutela infatti l'incolumita' del personale medico incaricato del trasporto e della cura dei feriti. Il giorno dopo, 5 razzi venivano sparati da Gaza verso il territorio israeliano, 4 dei quali intercettati dalla difesa israeliana, il quinto atterrato nei pressi di un asilo. In risposta, Israele ha bombardato dieci presunte "postazioni terroristiche" nella Striscia. Intanto sempre venerdi' l'ennesima richiesta di un'inchiesta internazionale presentata all'ONU, stavolta dal Kuwait, e' stata rigettata per il solo veto degli Stati Uniti. La risoluzione, che condannava sia il blocco su Gaza che il lancio di missili contro Israele, ha ottenuto il voto favorevole di 10 paesi, fra cui Russia e Francia, e l'astensione di quattro, fra cui la Gran Bretagna. Non è un caso che Londra, dal 2015, ha piu' che raddoppiato la vendita di armi a Israele, compresi fucili e ammunizioni. L'ambasciatrice USA Nikki Haley ha poi presentato una contro risoluzione in cui Tel Aviv veniva completamente assolta per le violenze, addossando la totale responsabilita' delle morti di Gaza su Hamas. Dopo aver letteralmente supplicato i rappresentanti degli altri paesi, Haley e' stata l'unica a votarlo. Arabia Saudita si riposiziona in Medio oriente contro Qatar e Turchia Re Salman dell'Arabia Saudita avrebbe chiesto a Emmanuel Macron, secondo quanto scrive la stampa francese, di dissuadere il Qatar dall'acquisto di sistemi missilistici russi S-400. "Minacciano la sicurezza dello spazio aereo saudita", reciterebbe la lettera di re Salman al presidente francese. Tanto che Riad si direbbe pronta a prendere tutte le misure, incluse quelle militari, necessarie alla distruzione dei sistemi russi. Eppure, furono gli stessi sauditi, nel febbraio scorso, ad accordarsi con Mosca per l'acquisto degli S-400. Ma una "piccola guerra vittoriosa" potrebbe essere proprio quel che ci vuole per soffocare il dissenso nella capitale saudita, che le centinaia di arresti, avvenuti nel 2017, non sono riusciti a liquidare. Il recente rimpasto di governo, con la nomina di tre nuovi ministri - del Lavoro e dello Sviluppo Sociale, degli Affari Islamici, della Cultura e dell'Informazione, sembra testimoniare che una crisi politica interna e' attualmente in corso. Tensioni anche con Ankara. Il Partito curdo dell'Unione Democratica, scrive il quotidiano turco Hürriyet, ha dato il via al progetto statunitense per la creazione, nel Nord della Siria, di truppe regolari preposte al controllo dei confini con l'Iraq. La durata del contratto e' di due anni e lo stipendio mensile ammonta a 200 dollari, parte dei quali arrivano, appunto, dalle casse dei sauditi. Crisi di governo in Arabia Saudita: Dov’è M. Bin Salman?
L’Italia giallo - verde ha alleati? E quali? Varato in Italia il primo governo cosiddetto populista gli analisti si interrogano su quella che sarà la collocazione dell'Italia nello scacchiere internazionale. Appare evidente che il governo gialloverde sia schierato su posizioni euroscettiche tendenti a rinegoziare i trattati europei che soffocano l'economia italiana a partire da quel Fiscal Compact per arrivare fino ai parametri di Maastricht. Ciò che maggiormente interroga gli analisti è se un paese debole come l'Italia e dipendente dal Quantitative Easing della BCE per tenere in vita il proprio sistema bancario, abbia la forza per rinegoziarli con qualche chance di successo magari grazie all'aiuto di qualche alleato insperati. Non si può non notare che indizi su possibili alleati del governo gialleverde ci sono ed arrivano dagli Stati Uniti. Infatti anche la stampa italiana ha pubblicato che l'improvviso abbassamento degli spread tra Bund e BTP è dovuto agli acquisti di giganti finanziari americani quali Bridgewater, Citi, Jp Morgan, Blackrock, Pimco e Prudential. Un'azione che non può non apparire come coordinata e tendente a dare sostegno all'Italia. Inoltre non si può non notare un cambiamento di valutazione da parte della stampa finanziaria USA: per esempio Bloomberg ha pubblicato un pezzo nel quale sostiene la necessità di un piano B di uscita dall'Euro per l'Italia. Per non parlare poi di un report di JPMorgan nel quale si spiega come per l'Italia sia conveniente l'uscita dall'Euro piuttosto che continuare a rimanerci a costo di continui piani d'austerità che la condannano ad una perenne stagnazione economica. Insomma non è azzardato dire che il governo italiano stia ottenendo un sostegno potentissimo e a pieno spettro da parte del mondo finanziario americano. Sostegno che non può essere casuale per la tempistica con cui arriva e lascia ipotizzare che gli USA vogliono utilizzare l'Italia nella battaglia sul commercio internazionale in corso contro la Germania. Donald Trump vuole bloccare l'invasione di merci provenienti dalla Germania e Roma potrebbe essere il jolly che gli farà vincere la partita.L’Europa è in crisi anche per conto suo Il nuovo governo italiano potrebbe avere l'effetto di una bomba per il sistema europeo. Un punto, questo, che mette d'accordo figure molto distanti tra loro, come l'ex consigliere di Donald Trump, Steve Bannon, e lo speculatore George Soros, ognuno dei quali, tuttavia, ne trae conclusioni diverse. "Roma oramai è il centro della politica mondiale. Quello che sta accadendo qui è straordinario", sostiene Steve Bannon in un'intervista per La Repubblica, in cui ammette di aver avuto un ruolo, seppur "non determinante", nella decisione di Salvini di unirsi a Di Maio. "Determinante e' quello che hanno fatto gli italiani", precisa l'ex funzionario Usa: “Avete dato un colpo al cuore alla bestia dell’Europa, delle capitali straniere, dei grandi media stranieri". L'avvento al potere dei populisti, a suo avviso, crescerà e porterà cambiamenti rivoluzionari, mentre Macron e la Merkel "cadranno come birilli". Uno scenario che, secondo lo speculatore George Soros, intervistato dal Corriere della Sera, si potrebbe ancora evitare, a patto che l'Unione Europea, invece di cercare di impartire lezioni, "si chieda che cos'ha da imparare da questo rimescolamento delle carte in Italia". Per ristabilire la fiducia, afferma Soros, "Bruxelles deve cambiare i regolamenti esistenti e pagare gran parte di quanto serve per integrare e sostenere i migranti, che sono bloccati in Italia in quantità così fuori proporzione". "Non è possibile né desiderabile ricollocarli in altri Paesi a forza", spiega Soros, aggiungendo che tra i numerosi problemi che l'Unione Europea si trova ad affrontare, "l’Italia è diventato il più pressante, perché ne minaccia i valori fondanti". Persino il Financial Times, lo stesso che parlava di "nuovi barbari", sostiene, ora, che sarà la mancanza di riforme a far andare in pezzi l’Eurozona, e non il nostro Paese, che in 20 anni di mala gestione da parte dei partiti di centro sinistra e di centro destra, "ha accettato regole europee profondamente contrarie agli interessi italiani”.Vienna: "Stop alle sanzioni contro la Russia" "E' ora di rispondere ai dazi imposti da Donald Trump, togliendo le sanzioni alla Russia.” A dirlo, in un'intervista di sabato 2 giugno, e' il vice-cancelliere austriaco Heinz-Christian Strache, leader del Partito della Liberta', parte della coalizione di governo. “Ho sempre messo in guardia dal portare la Russia nelle braccia della Cina”, ha sottolineato Strache. Sulla stessa linea, il Cancelliere Sebastian Kurz: "Gli USA stanno diventando un partner commerciale sempre piu' inaffidabile". Il tutto alla vigilia della visita a Vienna del presidente russo Vladimir Putin, prevista per domani martedi' 5 giugno. Le sanzioni imposte alla Russia dal 2014 sono costate all'Austria piu' di 2 miliardi di euro in esportazioni. A far eco a Vienna potrebbe essere il neo governo italiano Lega-5Stelle.Mosca: Contromisure verso Washington e i suoi alleati http://publication.pravo.gov.ru/Document/View/0001201806040032?index=3&rangeSize=1In risposta alle sanzioni economiche di Washington, il presidente russo Vladimir Putin ha firmato la nuova legge sulle contromisure contro le azioni ostili degli Stati Uniti e dei suoi alleati. Il documento era stato approvato dalla Duma il 22 maggio e dal Consiglio della Federazione Russa il 30 maggio scorso. Ora il governo ha il potere di introdurre sulla base della decisione del presidente russo varie contromisure, tra cui restrizioni a import ed export, a condizione che non si applichino a beni vitali non fabbricati in Russia e in altri paesi. Il governo potrà annullare le contromisure qualora le cause vengano meno. Il sangue di Gaza non fa rumore "Non era una pallottola vagante. Mia figlia e' stata deliberatamente uccisa." Queste le parole della madre di Razan Al-Najar, l'infermiera di 21 anni uccisa dai soldati israeliani a est di Khan Younis,Gaza, durante le proteste di venerdi' 1 giugno, mentre prestava assistenza ai feriti. "Cercavamo di portare via i feriti dalla zona di confine”, racconta l'infermiera Lamya Najjar, "quando i soldati hanno dapprima lanciato gas lacrimogeni e poi sparato proiettili a caso. Uno di questi ha colpito Razan al petto ed e' uscito dalla schiena". Almeno altri tre membri della Mezzaluna Rossa sono stati feriti. Israele ha dovuto ordinare un'inchiesta. L'Articolo 24 della Convenzione di Ginevra tutela infatti l'incolumita' del personale medico incaricato del trasporto e della cura dei feriti. Il giorno dopo, 5 razzi venivano sparati da Gaza verso il territorio israeliano, 4 dei quali intercettati dalla difesa israeliana, il quinto atterrato nei pressi di un asilo. In risposta, Israele ha bombardato dieci presunte "postazioni terroristiche" nella Striscia. Intanto sempre venerdi' l'ennesima richiesta di un'inchiesta internazionale presentata all'ONU, stavolta dal Kuwait, e' stata rigettata per il solo veto degli Stati Uniti. La risoluzione, che condannava sia il blocco su Gaza che il lancio di missili contro Israele, ha ottenuto il voto favorevole di 10 paesi, fra cui Russia e Francia, e l'astensione di quattro, fra cui la Gran Bretagna. Non è un caso che Londra, dal 2015, ha piu' che raddoppiato la vendita di armi a Israele, compresi fucili e ammunizioni. L'ambasciatrice USA Nikki Haley ha poi presentato una contro risoluzione in cui Tel Aviv veniva completamente assolta per le violenze, addossando la totale responsabilita' delle morti di Gaza su Hamas. Dopo aver letteralmente supplicato i rappresentanti degli altri paesi, Haley e' stata l'unica a votarlo. Arabia Saudita si riposiziona in Medio oriente contro Qatar e Turchia Re Salman dell'Arabia Saudita avrebbe chiesto a Emmanuel Macron, secondo quanto scrive la stampa francese, di dissuadere il Qatar dall'acquisto di sistemi missilistici russi S-400. "Minacciano la sicurezza dello spazio aereo saudita", reciterebbe la lettera di re Salman al presidente francese. Tanto che Riad si direbbe pronta a prendere tutte le misure, incluse quelle militari, necessarie alla distruzione dei sistemi russi. Eppure, furono gli stessi sauditi, nel febbraio scorso, ad accordarsi con Mosca per l'acquisto degli S-400. Ma una "piccola guerra vittoriosa" potrebbe essere proprio quel che ci vuole per soffocare il dissenso nella capitale saudita, che le centinaia di arresti, avvenuti nel 2017, non sono riusciti a liquidare. Il recente rimpasto di governo, con la nomina di tre nuovi ministri - del Lavoro e dello Sviluppo Sociale, degli Affari Islamici, della Cultura e dell'Informazione, sembra testimoniare che una crisi politica interna e' attualmente in corso. Tensioni anche con Ankara. Il Partito curdo dell'Unione Democratica, scrive il quotidiano turco Hürriyet, ha dato il via al progetto statunitense per la creazione, nel Nord della Siria, di truppe regolari preposte al controllo dei confini con l'Iraq. La durata del contratto e' di due anni e lo stipendio mensile ammonta a 200 dollari, parte dei quali arrivano, appunto, dalle casse dei sauditi. Crisi di governo in Arabia Saudita: Dov’è M. Bin Salman?
Farris Barakat is the brother of Deah, who--along with his wife Yusor and her sister Razan--died in a senseless, hateful killing three years ago. He joined us in-studio for a spiritual conversation about converting such darkness into positivity, through organizations like The Light House Project, as well as Our Three Winners. https://projectlight.house/ https://www.ourthreewinners.org/ Guest: Farris Barakat Host/Producer: Tariq I. El-Amin Executive Producer: Abdul Malik Mujahid Music: Manuele Atzeni - NeVe - http://bit.ly/2ujOH9y Image: courtesy of Our Three Winners - https://www.ourthreewinners.org/programs-1
While OT was kicking it with Khayra & Razan, Abri joins their stoop for a quick catch up to reminisce the good old days and discuss his latest EP with the Dreamfleet, We Fly. #WelcomeToYourTribe ---- The Dukkan Show is hosted by OT, Irshad, Toofless, and Reem www.dukkanshow.com Facebook | Instagram | Twitter See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
While OT was kicking it with Khayra & Razan, Abri joins their stoop for a quick catch up to reminisce the good old days and discuss his latest EP with the Dreamfleet, We Fly. #WelcomeToYourTribe ---- The Dukkan Show is hosted by OT, Irshad, Toofless, and Reem www.dukkanshow.com
This week, Khayra of MSDTFR & Azzbda podcasts, and Razan of Kerning Cultures podcast came through the Dukkan Stoop to kick it with OT, while Reem was in Beirut. OT, Khayra, & Razan had a great time together catching up, discussing the podcast world, life, content, and simply enjoying each other's company. #WelcomeToYourTribe ---- The Dukkan Show is hosted by OT, Irshad, Toofless, and Reem www.dukkanshow.com Facebook | Instagram | Twitter See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
This week, Khayra of MSDTFR & Azzbda podcasts, and Razan of Kerning Cultures podcast came through the Dukkan Stoop to kick it with OT, while Reem was in Beirut. OT, Khayra, & Razan had a great time together catching up, discussing the podcast world, life, content, and simply enjoying each other's company. #WelcomeToYourTribe ---- The Dukkan Show is hosted by OT, Irshad, Toofless, and Reem
“Our Three Winners” The legacy of the family members who were killed by a terrorist in NC Wednesday. Deah, Yusor, and Razan.
Le 10 février 2015, le frère de Suzanne Barakat, Deah, sa belle-sœur, Yusor, et la sœur de Yusor, Razan, ont été tués par leur voisin à Chapel Hill, en Caroline du nord. Selon l'assassin, il les aurait tués suite à une dispute de voiture. Sa version n'a pas été questionnée par les médias et la police jusqu'à ce que Barakat s'exprime lors d'une conférence de presse, appelant les meurtres par leur vrai nom : des crimes de haine. En relatant comment sa famille et elle ont reconquis leur histoire, Barakat nous appelle à nous exprimer quand nous sommes témoin d'une intolérance haineuse et d'exprimer notre soutien envers ceux qui font face à la discrimination.
El 10 de febrero de 2015, Deah, el hermano de Suzanne Barakat, su cuñada Yusor y la hermana de esta, Razan, fueron asesinadas por su vecino en Chapel Hill, Carolina del Norte. La versión del criminal, de haberles matado por una disputa de tráfico, fue difundida por la prensa a través de la misma lente, hasta que Barakat declaró en una rueda de prensa el verdadero motivo del crimen: odio por ser de otra fe religiosa. Mientras reflexiona acerca de los acontecimientos, Barakat nos anima a hablar cada vez que seamos testigos de la intolerancia llena de odio y a expresar nuestra solidaridad con aquellos que sufren la discriminación.
Dia 10 de fevereiro de 2015, o irmão de Suzanne Barakat, Deah, sua cunhada Yusor e a irmã de Yusor, Razan, foram assassinados por seu vizinho em Chapel Hill, Carolina do Norte. A história do autor do crime, de que os matou por uma discussão de trânsito, não foi questionada pela imprensa ou pela polícia até que Suzanne resolveu falar em uma entrevista coletiva, chamando os assassinatos pelo que eles realmente eram: crimes de ódio. Enquanto Suzanne reflete sobre como ela e sua família retomaram o controle da narrativa, ela nos convoca a nos posicionarmos, quando presenciarmos o ódio e a intolerância, e expressarmos nossa aliança por aqueles que enfrentam a discriminação.
On February 10, 2015, Suzanne Barakat's brother Deah, her sister-in-law Yusor and Yusor's sister Razan were murdered by their neighbor in Chapel Hill, North Carolina. The perpetrator's story, that he killed them over a traffic dispute, went unquestioned by the media and police until Barakat spoke out at a press conference, calling the murders what they really were: hate crimes. As she reflects on how she and her family reclaimed control of their narrative, Barakat calls on us to speak up when we witness hateful bigotry and express our allyship with those who face discrimination.
In episode two, host Will McInerney talks with reporter Reema Khrais about her personal connections to the Chapel Hill Shootings, and Will travels to the Syrian border to visit a dental clinic named in honor of Deah, Yusor, and Razan. Subscribe to this Podcast Stories with a Heartbeat is a new podcast hosted by poet Will McInerney that explores the human condition in conflict through poetry, listening, and conversation. On February 10th, 2015 Deah Barakat, his wife Yusor Abu-Salha, and her sister Razan Abu-Salha were murdered in Chapel Hill, North Carolina. All three young American-Muslims were shot and killed execution style in their home. Last episode on Stories with a Heartbeat, we relived the night of the Chapel Hill Shootings through the eyes of Deah’s brother, Farris Barakat. Shortly after that night, this story echoed around the world as the victims’ legacy was honored from Chapel Hill to the Syrian border, and concerns over hate crimes and Islamophobia moved to the forefront.
In this emotional Juma'ah khutbah, Sheikh Atef discusses the legacy of Deah, Yusor, and Razan, three students who were shot dead by their neighbor in Chapel Hill, NC. This is a beautiful khutbah with lessons on patience in the face of tragedy, martyrdom, and what it means to live a meaningful life.
NYC Councilman Robert Jackson and Imam Taleb in studio report on the community campaign efforts to have the city recognize the Muslim Holidays in NYC schools (starts at 4:00). Playwright and author Mujahid Ali talks with Tamara Issak about his play "Domestic Crusaders" currently on stage in New York's East Village (starts at 34:04). Syrian student Razan's radio short feature based on her workshop in Damascus with BNAziz (starts at 44:30).