The birthers are multiplying—and they could have a real impact on the Republican presidential primary. In a new survey, 51% of those who say they’ll vote in the primary also say they don’t believe President Obama was born in the United States, according to Public Policy Polling . Only 28%…
Continue reading …Egypt-watchers started warning the White House early last year that the country was unstable, but the administration continued to offer a muted response, the Wall Street Journal reports. The Egypt Working Group, which includes human rights activists, Mideast experts, and neoconservative policymakers, sent letters to Hillary Clinton urging a more…
Continue reading …Writing YA fiction first about Guantánamo, now Egypt, has taught me that the toughest material can actually make the most compelling stories My second novel for young adults, The Glass Collector, is set in Cairo around the time Obama visited the city in 2009 to make his first presidential speech in the Middle East . I had no idea when I wrote the novel quite how topical it would become. Great timing you might think. Sacred synchronicity, I prefer. My last novel, Guantánamo Boy , tells the story of 15-year-old Khaled, a British Muslim who is abducted while on holiday with his family in Pakistan and rendered to Guantánamo Bay. I chose to tackle these two difficult subjects because I believe that young people hunger and thirst for striking stories that allow them to make sense of the world they live in. Books that deal with controversial issues reflect the outside world but reveal truths that aren’t available in newsworthy statistics and facts. They put questions that are difficult to formulate, and provide answers that are often challenging and demanding but satisfying to consider. Modern children’s fiction is crammed with moral dilemmas and subjects as diverse as teenage pregnancy, drug use, domestic violence and war – so The Glass Collector , about a Zabbaleen teenager who’s a Coptic Christian living in the slums of Cairo under a regime that considers him dispensable and mostly invisible, fits right in. My motive, though, wasn’t to tell another controversial story, or to be topical, but to challenge the myth that people we don’t know, who have nothing, and live in countries we can barely locate, aren’t anything like us. There were other challenges too. My teenager, Aaron, spends his days collecting waste from the city and carting it home to a bullying step-family who separate the paper, metal, rags and glass before selling it to unscrupulous merchants. Decisions about voice, language, community, religious customs, food and education (or lack of), were pressing and ever present, but intense though they and the necessary inventions were, it soon became more important to highlight the conflict between the hero’s desires and his circumstances in order to create a vivid story. But the more challenging the idea, the more interesting and exciting a story is to write. It’s a profound and pleasurable experience to expand the imagination on every level. We live in war-torn, troubled times. No one can say what’s going to happen in Egypt in the wake of the revolution, but the Zabbaleen supported the protests in Cairo because they suffered under the Mubarak regime, which threatened their way of life and very existence. I chose difficult subjects because I believe old myths must be challenged before new myths can be written. New myths where everyone is valued and those who have the least are valued most of all. Children and teenagers Egypt guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …President Obama issued a formal statement yesterday threatening to veto any spending bill the House GOP devises that doesn’t meet his specifications. “If the president is presented with a bill that undermines critical priorities or national security … the president will veto the bill,” the statement read, according to the…
Continue reading …It’s not exactly the most surprising news of the day: Borders is filing for bankruptcy protection and will shutter about 30% of its stores—or about 200 locations—over the next few weeks. The 40-year-old company, which has struggled in the face of competition from Amazon, the Kindle, and deep-discounters…
Continue reading …CBS correspondent Lara Logan, who was beaten and sexually assaulted by a mob in Cairo last Friday, is recovering and could leave the hospital to be reunited with her two young children as soon as today, sources tell the Daily Beast. Logan, who had been arrested and interrogated by the…
Continue reading …Mahmood Karzai, brother of Afghan President Hamid Karzai, has risen from running a few modest restaurants in the US to being one of Afghanistan’s most prosperous businessman. Federal authorities, believing there was more than just a little shady dealing along the way, are seeking his indictment on racketeering, extortion, and…
Continue reading …Egypt’s police took to the street to show solidarity with protesters who toppled president Mubarak. Shouting they are hand in hand with the people, they said were following orders. Can the police force wipe out its bloody history with the people of Egypt? Will the Egyptians forgive and forget?
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