Sunday, January 20, 2013
Roundup of my favorite online foreign language resources
Monday, March 14, 2011
Program Announcement: The Beirut, Damascus & Gulf Exchanges May-July 2011
PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENT: The Exchange is an effort by Mideastwire.com and its partners to promote engagement and understanding through a variety of city-focused, student conferences in and around the Middle East. The first Exchange was launched in June 2008 in Beirut, Lebanon. Now, several years on, over 150 students from 40 different countries have participated, with many going on to work as diplomats in their home countries, for NGOs serving the region and as social entrepreneurs. This year, we are offering the Gulf Exchange May 22-31 (in partnership with Project Encounter and the Dubai School of Government), the Beirut Exchange June 12-26 and the Damascus Exchange July 2-16 (in partnership with The Syria Report). ********* To view CNN on The Exchange, click here To view AFP on The Exchange, click here To view The Exchange website and previous Programs, click here To view the Gulf Exchange website, click here To apply, or inquire about any of the Exchanges, email info@mideastwire.com ********************** THE GULF EXCHANGE
The first Gulf Exchange will take place May 22-31, 2011. The application process is now open. The Gulf Exchange, a flagship initiative of Project Encounter, is a visit program for young influence-makers and future leaders primarily from North America and Europe to the UAE, Qatar, and the Gulf, with an integrated itinerary to deepen understanding of the political, economic, and social dimensions of the Middle East. It is organized in partnership with Mideastwire.com. The application process is open to current or recent graduate students, or young professionals, who show exceptional ability and professional promise. In rare cases, undergraduate students may be considered for the program on a case-by-case basis. The initial deadline for the application is March 31, 2011. The second and final deadline for the application is April 15, 2011. Costs: The Gulf Exchange benefits from sponsors that help defray the costs borne by participants. Participants will have to pay for their own airfare from their home city to Dubai and will pay a subsidized rate for accommodations for the 11 nights ($600 for single accommodation, $300 for double occupancy). Other logistical costs and several meals will be covered by Project Encounter. Participants will be expected to arrange their own visas (most can receive visas on arrival to Qatar and the UAE). Pocket money for other meals, shopping and other expenditures will be needed, and participants will receive guidelines ahead of the trip. For more details, please email apply@projectencounter.org To apply, visit Project Encounter ********************** THE BEIRUT EXCHANGE June 12-26/Application deadline April 15, 2011 Limited spaces available/Rolling acceptance In an effort to further its commitment to promoting dialogue and understanding, Mideastwire.com is pleased to announce the Seventh Beirut Exchange program. The two-week program June 12-26, 2011 will engage students from around the world in a multifaceted discussion of some of the key issues facing the region. ********* The Beirut Exchange program rests on three tracks: Academic - Participants will attend a series of lectures and colloquia led by leading academics and public intellectuals. Topics will include: International law in theory and practice in the Middle East; The United Nations as peacekeeper and mediator; Engaging political Islam; Pax Syriana in Lebanon; Asymmetrical conflict: the July 2006 Lebanon war; Human development in the Middle East and other topics. Language - Participants will have the option of attending 20 hours of Arabic language instruction at the Saifi Arabic Institute for Arabic Language in Beirut. Modules for both colloquial and formal Arabic will be available at different levels. Dialogue with Leaders - Participants will have the opportunity to meet, listen and engage social, political and economic leaders from across the spectrum in Lebanon - with a particular (though not exclusive) emphasis on exposure to leading Islamist and opposition currents. ********* Previous Speakers (partial list only): ·Omar Bakri, Iqra Islamic Trust for Research and Islamic Studies ·Bilal Baroudi, As-Salam Mosque Tripoli ·Nicholas Blanford, Times of London ·Richard Chambers, International Foundation for Electoral Systems ·Alastair Crooke, Conflicts Forum ·Robert Fisk, The Independent ·Toufic Gaspard, Economist ·Hanin Ghaddar, NOW Lebanon ·Timur Goksel, American University of Beirut ·Judith Palmer Harik, Matn University ·Nadim Houry, Human Rights Watch ·Farid El-Khazen, AUB ·Eli Khoury, Quantum Communications ·Karim Makdisi, AUB ·Sayyid Mohammed Marandi, Tehran University ·Michael Miller, European Commission ·Ibrahim Mussawi, Al-Intiqad ·Omar Nashabe, Al-Akhbar ·Nir Rosen, Journalist ·Osama Safa, Lebanese Center for Policy Studies ·Paul Salem, Carnegie Middle East Center ·Michel Samaha, Frm. Republic of Lebanon ·Milos Struger, UNIFIL ·Fawwaz Traboulsi, AUB ·Michael Young, Daily Star ********* Costs: Tuition - $2,000; Partial financial aid is available for those students and individuals that can demonstrate need. Note that this year, the Beirut and Damascus Exchanges can be taken together at a discounted rate. The tuition for both programs, before financial aid, is set at $3,500, with one "break" week June 27-July 1 occurring at the student's discretion in either Syria or Lebanon. Accommodation - Recommended accommodation is at our facility, Saifi Urban Gardens. Room rates vary depending on arrangements, but generally fall within the range of $300-$500 for the duration of the program. Alternative accommodation is available upon request. Airfare - $800, approximate from the European Union. Please note that all academic programming will take place at Saifi Urban Gardens, Gemmayze, Beirut. Tuition is 50% refundable up to three days before the program commences should the situation in Lebanon warrant a cancellation by Mideastwire.com. (Airline tickets and accommodation should be purchased with travel insurance.) ********************** THE DAMASCUS EXCHANGE July 2-16/Application deadline May 1, 2011 Limited spaces available/Rolling acceptance In an effort to further its commitment to promoting dialogue and understanding, Mideastwire.com, in partnership with The Syria Report, is pleased to announce that it is accepting applications for the Second Damascus Exchange. The two-week program July 2-16, 2011 will engage students from around the world in a multifaceted discussion of some of the key issues facing Syria and the region. ********* The Damascus Exchange program rests on three tracks: Academic - Participants will attend a series of seminars led by leading academics and public intellectuals in Syria. Topics will include: Economic reform challenges; The evolving relationship between Syria and Turkey; Syria's role in the Middle East peace process; Arab nationalism; Hydro-politics in the Levant; and, Doing business in Syria: Barriers, opportunities and practices, including several other topics. Language - Participants will have the option of attending 20 hours of Arabic language instruction. Modules will be available at different levels. Dialogue with Leaders - Participants will have the opportunity to meet, listen and engage political, economic and religious leaders in Syria. ********* Program Format: The period 9am to 11am (Sundays-Thursdays) will be taken up by small group Arabic instruction. From 11am to 1pm there will generally be a lunch break at the student's discretion. From 1pm to 5pm - and often from 7pm to 9pm - the academic seminars will be held at the hotel where students will listen to presentations from speakers and engage in a moderated discussion on the specific topic. On some nights, optional leisure activities will be offered. Weekends are broken into three parts: Friday mornings the entire group will board a bus and travel to meet with a prominent political/religious leader; a lunch break will ensue. In the afternoon, a second such meeting will take place. On Saturdays, the entire group will travel to different sites across Syria. All transportation costs are included in the tuition. ********* Costs: Tuition - $2,000; Partial financial aid is available for those students and individuals that can demonstrate need, including being a current recipient of financial aid. Note that this year, the Beirut and Damascus Exchanges can be taken together at a discounted rate. The tuition for both programs, before financial aid, is set at $3,500, with one "break" week June 27-July 1 occurring at the student's discretion in either Syria or Lebanon. Hotel - The conference will take place at the Fardoss Tower Hotel. Under Mideastwire.com's group rate, shared double rooms are available for approximately $70 per night, per student, including all taxes and breakfast ($980 for the 14 nights of the program). Single rooms are available for approximately $130 per night. For the hotel website please visit, www.fardosstower.com. Note that less expensive accommodation is available upon request at nearby hotels/hostels. Airfare - Airfare rates vary depending on point of origin and the exact flight period. Note that July is the tourist high season in Syria so participants are advised to book their air travel as early as possible. ********** Our Partner: The Syria Report is the leading source of economic, business and financial information on Syria. The website features a large database of economic news, the only online directory of Syrian corporations, a weekly tenders list and an events section. For more information, please visit: http://www.syria-report.com/index.asp |
Wednesday, December 29, 2010
Jordan, Part 1
Sunday 17 June 2007, 15h 23min 49s
We finally left the airport around 7pm and it's now 10.21 pm. I am in an apartment at the American Center for Oriental Research with 4 other women. They are all super nice. I saw white pepper trees for the first time ever. Everything is amazing. There is currently something (a cat maybe?) mewling outside the window. I also hear some nice Middle Eastern music in the distance. It's pleasantly cool and dark.
Anyhow, I'll write more later, I just wanted you all to know I'm safe and I can't wait for my friend Andy to come down from Damascus.
Nicki or Pop-please let my mom know I'm safe.
Monday 17 June 2007, 6h 56min 28s
It’s 1.30 pm and we’ve just finished our in-country orientation here at our residence at ACOR. We arrived last night at about 8 to the American Center for Oriental Research and I was in bed by midnight. I share an apartment with 4 other women, and 2 of us share a bedroom (the other 3 are in the 2nd bedroom). We have a kitchen, bathroom and living room with comfortable, serviceable furniture. I’ll take pictures and send them shortly.
The temperature inside our apartment stays comfortable and despite the dry heat, there is a fair amount of gentle breeze that keeps things livable. We had the pleasure of a security presentation from the US Embassy and there is an armed Jordanian guard outside. We are assured that the area is quite safe.
Our classes begin Wednesday, and the university can be seen across a busy highway from the balcony at ACOR. The ACOR residence is built into a hill, so even though my room is on the 6th floor, it’s only 2 flights above the entrance level where the guard is posted (at the expense and insistence of Jordanian authorities). It’s also up a nice little hill, assuring that on the daily treks to and from the university, I will be exerting myself. We also live within walking distance of souq sultan, the nearest market where there are stores and things to buy essentials. Dinner is provided, and we are told that our cook (with 46 years of experience cooking for Americans) prepares decidedly Western meals, which is disappointing. I will therefore seek out Jordanian food as much as possible for lunch, which I’ll be taking mostly near the university, as we have class Sunday through Thursday from 9 am till 3 pm.
About the residence: despite the building being commissioned and purchased by the US, the plumbing is decidedly Jordanian. As such, we have been instructed several times to put our “hygienic paper” in the “covered rubbish bins” adjacent to our nice, clean Western toilet. What fun! We are told that the cleaning crew will empty these receptacles once a week, but 5 women produce who-knows-how-much paper waste in the Western excretory ritual, so I imagine it will be likely that intermittent self-emptying may be necessary. [This comment amuses me, as just last week in Cairo, I arrived late to my conference in time to hear the speaker refer to how obsessed westerners are with excrement. So true].
We’ve also been invited to a 4th of July celebration hosted by the US Embassy specifically for under 35s quasi in our honor featuring the theme of “Future Jordanian Leaders.” It’s a tremendous privilege and I am very much looking forward to it. Also, we’ve been issued fabulous, brand-new text books with dvds, and we will have access to both optional and mandatory tutoring throughout each school week. I’ve seen from the bus window from the airport Burger King, Popeyes, several McDonalds and other American delights.
Lunch is in 7 minutes and I’m hungry, so I’ll close here. More updates to come!
OH wait, I almost forgot to mention: the 4am call to prayer. Magical it is to be awoken to the blaring chanting that starts at one mosque and starts again at about 5-minute intervals at each of the different neighborhood mosques.
Tuesday 19 June 2007, 10h 50min 42s
[personal message to Andy, studying beginning Arabic in Damascus]
As usual, loved the update. Ah personal space issues. I'll write later in more detail, but I am super proud to have navigated to and from the supermarket in the taxi-using my sparse vocab (Tla'a al ali-the name of my neighborhood, left and right which I've forgotten already, I suck).
Wednesday 20 June 2007, 12h 01min 05s
Today, Wednesday, we had our first day of class (Finally!). There are 7 other Americans with me. We have 2 hours of Jordanian colloquial Arabic and then 3 hours of Modern Standard Arabic.
But before I get into that, Monday I attended a viewing at the 13th annual Franco Arab Film Festival-which required my first taxi ride. Luckily one of the 3 of us who went is in the intermediate class, and she took control of telling our driver the destination. The movie, Making Of, was Tunisian and was the dramatization of the birth of a terrorist/suicide bomber. Artistically it was pretty bad (ugh, especially the mangled title), but interesting nonetheless as the first Tunisian move I’ve ever seen. Even though the taxi had to turn around twice, we did manage to get home.
Tuesday we toured the university, which is huge. There are 35000 Jordanian students and about 1500 foreign students (including other Arabs). Most of the women cover their heads and no one wears a backpack or sunglasses. It is very hot and I have no idea how they can bear it fully covered in black, some of them even wearing gloves. On the tour I fell down and bruised my behind and my left forearm on some slippery stairs behind the library. I now have a huge bruise on my arm. [ah the first of many clumsy encounters with slippery Middle Eastern surfaces].
After the tour of the language center and the university, I went with 2 of my roommates to find the “upscale” grocery store in Amman. Empowered by the successful taxi rides, I made sure I knew the words for right and left and off we went. The grocery store was huge, clean, stocked with myriad international items (including soy milk) and air conditioned. I also experienced a Jordanian KFC—we were starving and there was no other food around—it was like an upscale café complete with plasma screens, upholstered chairs and funky Arab music. We even got extra fries for promising to return.
Three of us went back to Al Hussein Cultural Center for the last showing at the film festival—WWW: What a Wonderful World—a Moroccan movie about an assassin that falls for a policewoman. It was awesome-except for the ending. Anyhow, I am now a pro at Amman taxi rides. It costs about 3 bucks to travel to a destination about 35 minutes away. Shocking!
During the short break, I finally had a shawarma-tasty spiced chicken in flat bread with onion. After class, some of went to the bookstore and impressed (NOT) the clerk with our new vocab. Marhaba, keef halak? Ma salaama! There was a children’s book called “Pussy in Boots” featuring Lord Kalem and young Samir-we got a good laugh at the Arabization of a western classic.
Amman is hot and hilly. There are hills everywhere (and stairs). When we get back into our apartment, we all promptly remove our pants, long-sleeved shirts and garments and don tank tops and shorts. I anticipate losing weight here rather easily, unless I get so lazy that I just pay the 45 cents it costs to get a taxi up the steep hill from the university to ACOR. [I gained weight that summer…HAH!] It will only get hotter before the summer is over. Fortunately the ACOR residence is well situated into a hill, so cool breezes and shade keep us cool indoors.
Sunday, October 3, 2010
“Thought is the blossom; language the bud; action the fruit behind it” Ralph Waldo Emerson
First this article on 27 August 2010 “Should British pupils give up studying French?” does eventually reach the salient point that actually accomplishing conversational fluency in a language cannot occur for most people within the classroom—and is quite difficult in any case, often with little pay-off. I’ve certainly come across a few people who are so adept at language learning that they need only a book or two, and a few weeks, to become quite competent, though these folks are usually heritage speakers of a language in the same language family as the target. In any event, the majority of others who claim to ‘speak’ a foreign language or two are complete bluffers who are relying on the ignorance or confidence of the interlocutor. These types are also extremely frustrating to those of us, including me, who devote a lot of time, effort, and relationship building to become conversant in a foreign language for real.
While French is not an easy language to learn, it is nonetheless less difficult for native English speakers to learn than is Arabic. French is not in the same language family as English—the former is a Romance language, the latter a Germanic language—however, due in large part to the Norman invasion in1066, French and English share more of an affinity than either language enjoys with Arabic—a Semitic language. That is why I am delighted at the number of programs, funding, and interest in learning Arabic and other lesser-taught languages (as they are currently called in pedagogical circles). While some of the personal comments in this article are a bit horrifying, it is interesting nonetheless (including a mention of the Critical Language Scholarship, which I had the privilege of enjoying 3 times).
Meanwhile, if it is indeed so hard, time-consuming, and labor intensive to become conversant in a foreign language (as opposed to ‘learning,’—what does that even mean?), why bother? I never seriously entertained a career as a translator, interpreter or foreign language teacher, despite the fact that the rest of the world assumed that those would be the only reasonable options available to a student in modern languages. Instead, I abandoned my biology major after one semester, transferred from a private, women’s college after my first semester, to a public university, and picked up my major in Modern Languages and Linguistics at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County. My goal? Two-fold: To increase the number books available to me to read and multiply exponentially possibilities to socialize. I have a hard time being motivated by money, except for money that I intend to use for my next big adventure. Fortunately, a major part of the mission of my current work is relationship building—a euphemism for socializing! While my current job doesn’t necessarily require my foreign language use, I am able to incorporate French and German into my daily routine thanks to my international colleagues. As for Arabic…I have my post-program language test tomorrow. I have been reading Arabic every day since I returned less than a month ago. Likewise, I have been listening to Arabic here and there, and writing emails to my Arabic teachers. As for conversation, the opportunities are sparse. Fortunately I will be spending two weeks in Egypt in December. Meanwhile, I am working on my dissertation, the methodology of which features indigenous materials—that is, books, essays, and articles written by Moroccans in Arabic and French.