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MetaxuCafe UpdatesSearching Member Sites
I’ve recently added a search function so that you can limit your Google search to just the blogs that are members of MetaxuCafe. I think that will be a good resource for everyone looking for literary topics online and you’ll find it right on the front page as well as other places on the site. Now if you want to read about, say Orhan Pamuk, but only want to search the litblogs you trust, you can narrow your search right here.
PEN World Voices Festival coverage
Originally posted at: A Bookseller's Tale
tags: literary events, politics,
This was an event for the Internet website Witness.org, the international human-rights organization that uses video to expose human rights abuses. A section of the site for Witness.org called ”The Hub” is for allowing people to post videos. They give video cameras to people “on the ground” so that they can post human rights violations. (I once went to the site and saw a Japanese reporter being kicked to death!) Anyway, as horrible as this may seem, getting images of human rights violations out to the world is the key to stopping these violations from happening.
The participants in the panel were Yousef Al-Mohaimeed (author of “Wolves of the Crescent Moon"), Thant Myint-U (author of “The River of Lost Footsteps: A Personal History of Burma"), Uzodinma Iweala (author of ”Beasts of No Nation”), and Mary Robinson, the former president of Ireland and member of the Elders, a group of political leaders gathered together by Nelson Mandela, Graça Machel, and Desmond Tutu to contribute their wisdom to world politics. It was exiting to see her at this event and a highlight of my PEN World Voices Festival. She was eloquent and add a touch of the power of possibilities that this festival can have to world politics. The moderator, Sameer Padania, is the webmaster for “The Hub.”
Each participant on the panel showed a video that they have on the “The Hub.”
The video Yousef Al-Mohaimeed showed was of a woman in Saudi Arabia driving. What’s the big deal you say? Women are not allowed to drive in Saudi Arabia. The woman was driving on a back road on a special day. I personally don’t know how to drive but that is MY CHOICE. We should work for the day when seeing a women drive in Saudi Arabia is as mundane as seeing one drive in other parts of the world.
Uzodinma Iweala should a video of HIV/AIDS people in Africa. He said that he is using the interview that he is doing in Africa of people with HIV/AIDS as a basis for his next book. He even went so far as to say that they are the ones writing his next book. It is a chance to “give people to speak for themselves.” He wasn’t shy of speaking about sex in relation to HIV/AIDS. I thought that was refreshingly brave to say that people who are not letting people know their AIDS status is for the fear of loosing love and human contact. Who wants to loose that? This is deep and moving to think that he is spending time talking and speaking with these people. He is turning to a very interesting writer. He lets his insecurities hang off his sleeves and is never reluctant to let his audience know that he isn’t sure about something. It quite refreshing.
Thant Myint-U redeemed himself from the Burma event with this event in my eyes. His video was of a Burmese Monk demonstration and crackdown. It was a video was taken by Al-Jazeera and was smuggled out. It was one of the very few images of the crackdown.
This was a powerful event and definitely one of my favorites of the festival. Visit the Hub it is truly an amazing site.
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