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The Pluralities of Islam: Sisters Doing It for Themselves [Audio]
November 8, 2009 – 12:50 pm | No Comment
The Pluralities of Islam: Sisters Doing It for Themselves [Audio]

Aruna Boodram - My audio documentary project is intended to show the pluralities of women that Islam has affected, whether they be practicing Muslims or not… I wanted to know how they understood Islam, how they understood feminism, and determining what the combination of the two would mean for them as Muslim women or those in solidarity with Muslim women. I also wanted to know how Islam has provided the vehicle in which these women have understood and managed realms of empowerment, strength and resistance to globalization, Western discourses and every day problems.
Listen here for the full audio documentary…

Happenings :: Diaspora Film Fest
October 29, 2009 – 9:10 am | No Comment
Happenings :: Diaspora Film Fest

The International Diaspora Film Festival (IDFF) provides Toronto audiences with an opportunity to experience the cultural mosaic of the present world through the medium of cinema.

Post Your Map :: Rayya Haddad
October 28, 2009 – 1:51 am | No Comment
Post Your Map :: Rayya Haddad

We will regularly be presenting a featured artist, writer or performer who is exploring questions of identity and personal narrative through their medium of expression.

The map is your representation. No rigid lines, no defined routes. You direct it on your own account.

Worldtown Hearsay :: The Recession’s Over (If you want it?)
October 20, 2009 – 8:33 am | One Comment
Worldtown Hearsay :: The Recession’s Over (If you want it?)

We trawl the news media so you don’t have to.

Facing the Kool-Aid Recovery with Columbia U. Prof. Dorian Warren [VIDEO]
RaceWire, The Colorlines Blog :: Watch the Video here

Worldtown Hearsay :: The Muslim Hockey Player
October 18, 2009 – 2:54 pm | No Comment
Worldtown Hearsay :: The Muslim Hockey Player

We trawl the news media so you don’t have to.

The Globe & Mail, Focus - Friday October 16th 2009 :: Nazem Kadri: Canada’s new game face

Who’s the ‘Reel Injun’? :: at the imagineNATIVE Film Festival
October 18, 2009 – 1:27 am | No Comment
Who’s the ‘Reel Injun’? :: at the imagineNATIVE Film Festival

TORONTO - “The imagineNATIVE Film + Media Arts Festival is an international festival that celebrates the latest works by Indigenous peoples on the forefront of innovation in film, video, radio, and new media.” Check out: ‘Tungijuq’ & ‘Reel Injun’

Post Your Map :: Tehran Without Distractions
October 3, 2009 – 9:09 pm | No Comment
Post Your Map :: Tehran Without Distractions

We will regularly be presenting a featured artist, writer or performer who is exploring questions of identity and personal narrative through their medium of expression.

The map is your representation. No rigid lines, no defined routes. You direct it on your own account.

Iraq is the Bomb :: Reviewing The Narcicyst
September 29, 2009 – 10:22 pm | No Comment
Iraq is the Bomb :: Reviewing The Narcicyst

I’m always conflicted when it comes to so-called “conscious rap”. Labels serve a purpose, yet at the same time they are confining and often times misleading. Immortal Technique is a “conscious rapper”, yet one can find countless homophobic and misogynistic lines throughout his albums. Cam’ron is a “gangsta/crack rapper”, and yet his classic tracks “D.R.U.G.S.” and “Sports, Drugs, & Entertainment” both astute commentaries that even Nancy Reagan could have championed in her “Just Say No” crusade. Another problem I have with the “conscious” label is that it immediately strips the music of its aesthetics and style. It removes the craft and art from the music. All to frequently, we as the listener tend to conflate “good message” with “good music”. Fortunately for us all, there exist emcees such as Narcy [The Narcicyst], an Iraqi emcee raised in Canada, who effortlessly weaves aesthetics and message together. It is music whose both form and content leave one feeling enlightened.

Idealize This!: The Ethics of Solidarity
September 7, 2009 – 11:19 pm | 2 Comments
Idealize This!: The Ethics of Solidarity

One of the first things a (good) transnational activist learns is the practical meaning of solidarity — which, as the latest issue of New York Times Magazine illustrates, is a concept not easily grasped by even the worldliest and most committed of advocates. This week’s installment of the NYT Magazine manages (for the most part) to thoughtfully and contextually explore the plights of Third World women, while examining some of the the hard realities of transnational activism. Nevertheless, the clear subtext of the articles belies the contributors’ apparent commitment to building real and lasting solidarity movements. As journalist Edwin Okong’o points out, the lead feature paints a rather two-dimensional (albeit compassionate) portrait of life in the brutal third world, but shies away from covering the efforts of impactful Third World activists and movements in favor of spotlighting the high-dollar (emphasis on the $) development projects of western nonprofit organizations.

Injustice, Struggle & Why It Even Matters: A view from Honduras
September 2, 2009 – 3:07 pm | One Comment
Injustice, Struggle & Why It Even Matters: A view from Honduras

I am too young to have lived through the period where coups and dictatorships were common in Latin America but many of the elders in my community are not and it is their very real and personal stories that have motivated me to do everything I can to support the resistance against the coup.