After the First Tunisian Blogger Meetup

We just got home from the first Tunisian Blogger Meetup at Biwa in Les Berges du Lac.

It was a lot of fun and really cool to meet all the bloggers who came. We really wished everyone else could have come too and we remembered the bloggers outside Tunisia too. I hope next time more people will come, including our expats, and we’ll have more fun.

We were 16 all in all, a lot more than I expected to show up. So that’s really great ๐Ÿ™‚
The following blogs were represented today: Mouse Hunter, Pens

links for 2005-04-24

Siddharta by Hermann Hesse

I bought “Siddharta” by Hermann Hesse from a used book store in downtown Tunis a couple of weeks ago, and only got around to finishing it today although it’s not that long.
Not much time left for me to read these days with work and a bunch of other things taking up my time.

When I first picked this book, I thought it was about the life of Siddharta, The Buddha. It turns out it’s not. It’s about the spiritual journey of an Indian man called Siddhartha during the time of the Buddha. He actually meets the Buddha but doesn’t follow his teachings because he no longer believes in teachers.

The story is an interesting one and does provoke thought in a number of places. I especially like the character’s thoughts on time, good vs. evil, and this quote: “Knowledge Can Be Communicated, But Not Wisdom”, which I think is true.
I also agree with the point that is made about everyone having the right to make their own mistakes, learn from them and use them to understand the world more.

I think this is a good book to readm especially for people who are at that stage of their lives when they’re searching for the meaning to it all and trying to make sense of everything. It gives another perspective and understanding of life which is always interesting.

Things That Only Happen In Movies

I just found this really funny list of things that only happen in movies. Here are my faves:

– If staying in a haunted house, women should investigate any strange noises wearing their most revealing underwear.
– If you are heavily outnumbered in a fight involving martial arts, your opponents will wait patiently to attack you on by one by dancing around you in a threatening manner until you have defeated their predecessor.
– One man shooting at 20 men has a better chance of killing them all than 20 men firing at once (it’s called Stallone’s Law).
– All beds have special L-shaped sheets that reach to armpit level on a woman but only up to the waist of the man lying beside her.
– When you turn out the light to go to bed, everything in you room will still be visible, just slightly bluish.
– Once applied, lipstick will never rub off. Even while scuba diving.
– The Eiffel Tower can be seen from any window of any building in Paris.
– When paying for a taxi, don’t look at your wallet as you take out a note. Just grab one out at random and hand it over. It will always be the exact fare.

Go on and read the 40 Things That Only Happen In Movies.

links for 2005-04-22

Groupism

Something that really annoys me in the world today is how people just have to think of themselves in terms of belonging to very specific seperate groups and how they get too obsessed with it all.

Not only that, but this seperation also results in ethnocentrism, where everyone thinks their group is superior to others, thus creating this ugly stupid form of racism.

It comes in many forms, from belonging to religious groups and their subgroups to belonging to geographical areas, countries in those areas, cities in those countries, towns in those cities, neighbourhoods in those towns, families…etc.

I understand the need to associate oneself to a group, it’s in our nature, but this is mad.
Why can’t we all in the end associate ourselves to the group of mankind and accept our differences as enriching factors for this group?
And if we absolutely have to break the group down to billions of seperated subgroups based on borders, religion or whatever else, why do we have to get so mad and fanatic about it, making it into racism and letting it create these deep fractures between us?

Patriotism is a great concept, but why can’t we apply it to our whole world?
Why can’t we open our eyes to the fact that we have more things that unite us all than things that divide us?

links for 2005-04-21

Mouled & Assida

Today is the birthday of Prophet Mohamed (PBUH), so best wishes to all Muslims everywhere.

The occasion is celebrated in different ways around the Muslim world.

In Tunisia, every home makes Assida, a pudding-like sweet delicacy based on zgougou, these little black seeds taken from a pine-like tree. I don’t know what they’re called elsewhere as I’ve only seen them used here in Tunisia.

I absolutely love Assida, It’s one of my favourite sweets.

On this day family members visit each other and take some assida with them to share. In fact, in the past when people used to care more about their neighbours, they’d also go out and give their neighbours some assida too.

Eman, my wife, made some great Assida this year. I’ll go get myself another serving. Yummy.

Make sure you taste Assida if you ever visit Tunisia. It simply rocks.

Palestine US Exhibit Stirs Controversy

Made in Palestine art exhibition stirs controversy in US…

A unique art exhibition showcasing the works of 23 Palestinian artists, from the West Bank and the Gaza Strip as well as those living in exile in countries such as Jordan, Syria and Germany, is facing uncertain times in the United States, with major museums refusing to play host.

Chronicling the modern history of Palestinians since 1948, Made in Palestine had its first showing in the United States at the Station Museum in Houston, in May 2003.

Currently on display in San Francisco, the opening attracted up to a thousand people. But alongside the accolades, it has also drawn the ire of some politicians.
As a result, most museums are fearful that hosting an exhibit that is pro-Palestinian could cost them their funding.

Once the current show draws to a close on 21 April, organisers suspect it could be curtains for the exhibition.

[Source: Al Jazeera]

I think it’s so unfair to not even let Palestinians express themselves and show their side of the story through peaceful art exhibitions like this one.

There is so much bias and ignorance that almost anything that is even slightly pro-Palestinian is automatically unaccepted and denied.

I think this is where those fat rich Arab purses should come in handy, funding projects like this and helping to get the peaceful message through.