[act-ma] Reminder: Gaza slide show March 5, Gaza photo exhibit thru April 12
skip schiel
skipschiel at gmail.com
Sun Mar 1 17:52:47 PST 2009
*For Gaza now very few people are coming. They face danger here to know the
truth and tell about what they have seen. This is very important for us to
feel sympathy, support and solidarity from others. Therefore Skip must show
people what he has learned and not worry about opposition. The few people
will gradually increase and eventually, knowing our truth, more people will
support us Palestinians.*
—Amal Sabawi, director of the Quaker Youth Program in Gaza (edited)
*
"Eyewitness Gaza," a multi media presentation about Schiel's trip in
January 2008, Thursday, March 5, 7 PM
617-876-3256, x 201 or 617-441-7756*
*At the University Lutheran Church in Harvard Square, Cambridge MA.*
*University Lutheran church, Cambridge, Harvard Square, 66 Winthrop St,
Cambridge, MA 02138 (www.unilu.org)
*(off JFK St, near Staples)*
**Photo exhibit: "Gaza is home to one & one-half million human beings: How
do they live?"
January 15 – April 12, 2009
**Hours: Mon – Thurs, 10 AM – 4, Sun 9 AM – 12
*Until recently we didn't hear much about Gaza, a narrow sliver of land in
Palestine-Israel that is home to 1.5 million Palestinians—some 75% of them
refugees since 1948 when the state of Israel was founded, and 1967, after
the Six Day War. With the carnage reported daily—rocket attacks by militants
against Israeli civilians and Israel's air, sea, and land attacks on Gaza,
as Israel has killed more than 1000 Palestinians, half of them civilians,
with more than 4000 injuries—the region is now in the anguished hearts of
many. Skip Schiel, a photojournalist from Cambridge Massachusetts, offers
the exhibit and multi media presentations about Gaza.
Mr. Schiel has traveled and photographed in Israel-Palestine over a
five-year period, usually three months each year. Using photographs and
stories, he will present his experiences from his last journey to the land
of troubles in January 2008. The photographer visited the apparent site of
the 2003 killing of Rachel Corrie, a young woman working with Palestinians
in Rafah. He toured the area near the Egyptian border wall which four days
later Gazans breached in a nonviolent attempt to break the siege. While in
Gaza Mr. Schiel worked with the American Friends Service Committee youth
program, teaching and photographing.
His professional life has been in filmmaking and photography, plus teaching
of those topics. For 10 years he taught filmmaking at Boston College, and
since 1990 he's taught photography thru the Cambridge Center for Adult
Education and Harvard University's Landscape Institute. His photography
ranges between landscape, abstract, experimental, portraiture, and socially
engaged. Which means he tries to link much of his photography to social
issues. These have included American Indians, African Americans, poverty,
environmental issues, and since 2003 Israel-Palestine. His photos have
appeared in the Boston Globe, Christian Science Monitor, and Progressive
Magazine, and are in the collections of Harvard University. He's had
exhibitions in numerous venues across the country. Photos are on his
website, teeksaphoto.org, and his blog, skipschiel.wordpress.com.
Free and open to the public. Donations accepted at the door for the January
28th show. Photographs on sale.
Attached: flyers for the exhibit and slide show
Please feel free to circulate.
—Skip
+++++++++++
Skip Schiel (a.k.a Ein al-Nour)
9 Sacramento St
Cambridge MA 02138-1843 USA
skipschiel at gmail.com
617-441-7756
Website: http://teeksaphoto.org
Blog: http://skipschiel.wordpress.com
To join my email list about my recent (2007-8) experiences in
Palestine-Israel, along with postings related to that issue, please reply
with SUBSCRIBE in the subject line.
"To be playful is not to be trivial or frivolous, or to act as if nothing of
consequence will happen. On the contrary, when we are playful with one
another, we relate as free persons, and the relationship is open to
surprise; everything that happens is of consequence, for seriousness is a
dread of the unpredictable outcome of open possibility. To be serious is to
press for a specified conclusion. To be playful is to allow for unlimited
possibility."
—James Carse
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