Archive for culture – Page 13

SIPA Events – Interdisciplinary Talks

SIPA is a very busy place.  Each week there are 10-15 events that feature interesting speakers and panels on a variety of topics.  The following entry was contributed by Erisha Suwal, a second year student at SIPA.  Erisha is working in our office this year and she, along with several other students, will be contributing posts throughout the year.

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While having lunch over lamb and rice with hot and white sauce, my Pakistani friends encouraged me to join them for a talk titled “ Pakistan 2010: The most dangerous decade begins.” The talk was organized by the Center for the Study of Democracy, Toleration, and Religion (CDTR). It is a Center that was founded after SIPA won a competitive grant and its main objective is to examine religion’s role in politics and international relations. The title was very intriguing and only the day before I had had a discussion   on how Pakistan seems to be in a constant state of turmoil. More than any other country. Perhaps even more than Afghanistan.  I joined them.

Christine Fair, Assistant Professor at the Center for Peace and Security Studies, Georgetown, was one of the panelists. She was speaking on ‘India and Pakistan in Afghanistan: Opportunities and Constraints.’  She argued that India had a strong interest in staying in Afghanistan especially to monitor Pakistan. She questioned why no one talks about India running intelligence operations in Afghanistan and why no one challenges India when it build schools very close to the Pakistani border. She claimed that the Pakistani Army personnel, particularly those in the lower ranks, want the U.S. out of Afghanistan because they believed that the American presence intensified Taliban presence in Afghanistan. Her talk led to a rich discussion on India, Pakistan and Afghanistan.

At the talk, I found out that Terry Eagleton was coming to speak the same evening   on “The New Atheism and the War on Terror.” Eagleton is an influential literary theorist and Distinguished Professor of English Literature at the University of Lancaster, who has written more than forty books. He gave an entertaining and insightful talk. The poster said, seating was on first come first serve basis. Usually I do not follow these warnings, but I’m glad I did this time. The room filled up very quickly and I ran into some SIPA professors. I saw Mahmood Mamdani, who teaches Political identities, State and Civil Wars in Africa and Theory, History, and Practice of Human Rightsand Professor S. Akbar Zaidi was also present. He teaches Political Economy of Pakistan: State, Society, and Economy.

Eagleton started off asking, “Why are atheists obsessed with religion as Puritans are obsessed with sex?”  He commented that Richard Dawkins and Christopher Hitchens, whom he dubbed Ditchkins, were engaged in anti-god diatribe with zero conception of faith and theology. He also argued that rise of Islamic fundamentalism was similar to “chickens coming home to roost.” Eagleton delivered provocative and controversial but witty statements and entertained his audience.

CDTR co-organized Terry Eagleton’s lecture with Heyman Center for the Humanities. I missed going to lectures outside of class. It is easy to immerse oneself in course-works and socializing, Wednesday’s two lectures reminded me of how being in Columbia exposes you to cutting edge discussions in whatever field it might be.

New Student Photo Series 2010 – Post #30

We had one more entry for our student photo series sneak in . . . it got past me with the start of Orientation.  This submission comes from Martha Chahary an incoming MIA student.

1st Photo (‘104 degrees Niger): This photo was taken in March 2006 on a spring break trip to Niger. The parched land is located outside a village in the western part of Niger called Bankilare. Villages were digging this ground to create a deep pool that would collect water during the rainy season. The ground was incredible hard and dry, and this wasn’t even during a year of drought.

104 degrees Niger

2nd Photo (‘baltic sea poland’): This is a photo taken off the coast of northern Poland in 2008 on in an inlet in the Baltic Sea.

baltic sea poland

3rd Photo (‘Ile Goree Senegal’):  This photo was taken a couple months ago on what used to be a slave island off the coast of Senegal, Ile Goree. The architecture and colors on this island are warm and beautiful. The island is protected by UNESCO but is inhabited and much of the locals make money off tourism.

Ile Goree Senegal

New Student Photo Series 2010 – Post #29

This entry will likely conclude our series on new student photos for this summer.  Thank you to everyone that participated!

Timothy Sandole is responsible for the first set.  He will be pursuing his MIA degree.

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A Sarajevo Rose is a concrete scar caused by a mortar shell’s explosion that was later filled with red resin.  Because Sarajevo was a site of intense urban warfare and suffered thousands of shell explosions during the Bosnian war of the 1990s, the marked concrete patterns are a unique feature to the city.  If time was taken to fill the concrete scar with the red resin, this marked where an individual lost their life.

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Jahorina Mountain was the site of the 1984 Yugoslavian Winter Olympics for women’s alpine skiing.  The moutain is located directly southeast of Sarajevo.  In this picture, a military installation of the Bosnian-Serb army is left in ruins possibly due to the bombing campaign by NATO forces during 1990’s war.

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Baščaršija is the main street of Sarajevo and one of its landmarks. It is located in the old town part of Sarajevo, designed in the OttomanTurkish style. It has souvenir shops and public fountains, and contains a bazaar that sells metalwork, jewellery and pottery. Each street is dedicated to a craft. It was built in the 16th century.

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Stari Most is a 16th century bridge in the city of Mostar, Bosnia and Herzegovina that crosses the river Neretva and connects two parts of the city. The Old Bridge stood for 427 years, until it was destroyed on November 9, 1993 during the Bosnian War. Subsequently, a project was set in motion to reconstruct it, and the rebuilt bridge opened on July 23, 2004.

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This next set was submitted by Gregg Sgambati, an incoming EMPA student.

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US-Mexico border in Nogales, AZ / Nogales, Mexico – US/Mexico border pictures are interesting to me, not because of the contrast of poor, undeveloped infrastructure on one side in comparison to the other, but because of the Mexican population living next to the wall and the disparity with the US side–in this case: Nogales, US population: 20,0000, Nogales, Mexico population, 159,000.
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Photo #4: A huge Buddha phantasm floating in the Kadamapa Buddha temple in Glen Spey, NY.  A wonderful retreat for city dwellers to enjoy solitude and have a chance to learn the introspection that Buddhism teaches.
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Homeless or perhaps sleeping, this person huddles on the stoop of an abandoned building in Brooklyn, NY.  New Yorkers are immune to the sense of human defeatism on their front stoops and streets.
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Off of the northern coast of Honduras, a group of Garfiunas take to sea to gather a particular type of sand from a remote
shore to use for building a home.  The Garifunas are descendants of African slaves (brought to Honduras to work on the sugar plantations) and the Carib (indian) people whose history is rather legendary.  Look them up!
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New Student Photo Series 2010 – Post #28

This week we are wrapping up our summer photo series featuring submissions by incoming students.  Thank you to everyone who has participated, it’s been another great summer of photo submissions.

The first three photos were submitted Salinthip (Joyce) Tangpanjapon, an incoming international dual degree student.

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Each year on Aug 12th Thailand not only celebrates the birthday of Her Majesty Queen Regent Sirikit, but it also treats this day as the national mother’s day.  As a traditional custom, fresh flower garlands (refer to “garland”
photo) are given to Mother as a symbol of respect and love.

Moreover, as a tropical country, Thailand has many exotic plants and flowers. For instance, the pink/white lotus grows naturally in a river or lagoon, coconut trees mostly found near to the beach, and the red flower. Thai flowers are in high demand as common export product.

Pink Thai Lotus

Garland

Coconut

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And the last photo comes from Emily Loebelson, an incoming MIA student.

This photo was taken in Kashgar, Xinjiang Province, China.  The photo shows Uighur children playing in the old part of Kashgar, the westernmost city in China.  The old town is quickly being razed to make room for the construction of a new modern city.  I had been living in Shanghai for almost three years before I was able to get out to Xinjiang, and I was wandering the streets gobsmacked at this totally different civilization in western China when I ran into these lively kids.

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New Student Photo Series 2010 – Post #27

We are wrapping up our last week of incoming photos from new students . . . enjoy this last week, hard to believe Orientation is next Monday!

The first set of photos come from Emily Eller, an incoming MIA student.
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These three photos were taken in The Gambia where I live.

I took the first two photos near the Sukuta Mosque on Tobaski day in 2007 and 2006 respectively. Tobaski is a day of prayer and celebration. The little boy is Kaderi Janneh and the other men are his uncles. I think he looks so sweet in his sunglasses! Everyone gets a new outfit for Tobaski but Kaderi gets new sunglasses every year too.
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The last photo is of Awa Bojang, durring her “Kolio” or the naming ceremony for her child. This was Awa’s first child and they had a huge party for her. She wore 9 different dresses during the ceremony. I think this one is particularly striking because of all the gold. The photo was taken inside her home in Gunjur.
Dad naming ceremony 2007 097
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The next set are from Rabayah Akhter, an incoming MIA student.
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I took the first picture in the summer of 2005 on a visit to Pakistan with my family. It is literally the prettiest place I’ve ever been. this is Saiful Muluk lake in Naran, a part of Kaghan valley in northern Pakistan which was particularly hard-hit by a devastating earthquake only a few months later. (also – I’ve never had fresher tasting fish in my life than from this area.)
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The second photo was taken during my favorite part of the day (while I was a Peace Corps volunteer in Mali) – before sunset when the women would be on their way home from a long day of washing laundry in the bani river. 2 years of watching them, I’m still flabbergasted at the amount of weight they could balance atop their heads without so much as a grimace.
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The third photo is one I had a friend take of me in my patriotic Malian outfit. Malians love expressing themselves through their clothes so i fit right in! The Malian markets were flooded with Obama t-shirts, belt buckles, watches, boxers and even Michelle Obama had was depicted on Malian fabric.
CIMG0836The last photo is one of my favorites . . . though I guess artistically, it isn’t saying much. Malians are, on the whole, devout Muslims. This is a picture of boatmen praying in a makeshift mosque (made on the sand-ish shore of where the Bani River should be, if there were more rain) . . . I like to think, as a Muslim myself, that this is all it takes to make a place of worship: a cleared-out space to pray, nothing fancy.

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"The most global public policy school, where an international community of students and faculty address world challenges."

—Merit E. Janow, Dean, SIPA, Professor of Practice, International and Economic Law and International Affairs

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