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Egyptian

Art and the Arab Spring

Subtitle: 
Art should have a prominent position in revolutionary politics, but as "signposts, not as overt political manifestos."
By Daanish Faruqi

The function of art—one of the functions of art—consists in bringing spiritual [geistigen] peace to humanity. I believe one cannot characterise the state of consciousness in contemporary art any better than by saying: more and more people are becoming conscious that spiritual peace is not enough because it has never prevented, nor could it ever prevent, real strife, and that perhaps one of the functions of art today is also to contribute to real peace - a function that cannot be foisted upon art, but must lie in the essence of art itself.

—Herbert Marcuse, Society as a Work of Art

[Doha, Qatar]—Cai Guo-Quiang's exhibit in Doha was exquisite. Incorporating techniques from Islamic artistic heritage such as miniature paintings, Saraab ("mirage"), the celebrated artist's inaugural solo exhibition in the Arab world creatively synthesised the hitherto unexplored historical and cultural dynamics of the Arab Gulf and China.

The Spirit of Tahrir

Event Details
Date/Time: 
Jan 29 2012 11:30am - 2:30pm
Price: 
$45 general with lunch, $20 students, $15 no lunch (standing room only)
Click here to buy tickets
Where: 
UCLA
Faculty Center
480 Charles Young Drive East
Los Angeles CA 90095
Subtitle: 
Honoring the Jan 25th Egyptian Revolution

Join us for an afternoon of celebrating the vision of the Egyptian Revolution. The program will include an exclusive keynote via phone from Cairo by prominent blogger and activist, Alaa Abd El-Fattah. VJ Um Amel joins DJ Ma'at for an afternoon of world music synchronized to a remix of Egyptian cinema and media emerging from the revolutions across the Middle East and North Africa. Drawn from the databases of the R-Shief initiative, this performance pays tribute to the vision of the people. Lunch will be served.

Arab Media Forum Presented by Randa Fouad of Egypt

Event Details
Date/Time: 
Jan 18 2012 6:00pm - 8:30pm
Price: 
Free to the public, reservations required
Where: 
UCLA Fowler Museum
Lenart Auditorium
Subtitle: 
A Step Towards Change

UCLA's OppenheimeLecture Series will present "The Role of the Media as a Partner in Protecting the Environment and Reaching Sustainable Development in Egypt" with special guest speaker Randa Fouad, on Wed., Jan. 18, at 6 pm on campus UCLA's Fowler Museum, Lenart Auditoriium. The forum is free to the public but reservations are required. Click here.

Gala Luncheon for the LCC

Event Details
Date/Time: 
Dec 20 2011 12:30pm - 2:30pm
Price: 
Contribution requested (min. suggested $100)
Click here to RSVP with donation
Where: 
The Palm
1100 S. Flower StreetLos Angeles CA 90015
RSVP by Dec. 15 to 310.657.5511

At 11th and Flower across from the Staples Center
free valet parking at lunch behind the restaurant
Subtitle: 
Levantine founders will reveal new growth plan for 2012

The arts help create a safe space for exploration of potentially difficult issues. The Middle East is the birthplace of our civilization. It is where Judaism, Christianity and Islam-three faiths with much in common-originate. The Middle East is also the primary resource for our energy needs and where we have many strategic partners, from Turkey and Israel to Saudi Arabia.

Annual Levantine Holiday Sale!

Event Details
Date/Time: 
Dec 9 2011 10:00am - 8:00pm
Price: 
Free entrance, gift wrapping and refreshments
Where: 
Levantine Cultual Center
5998 W. Pico Blvd.
Los Angeles CA 90035
Between La Cienega Blvd. and Fairfax Ave.
ample street parking or CVS underground lot
Subtitle: 
Up to 50% off all items in stock!

The holidays are a time for levity and friendship! We are pleased to present fine art, books, DVDs, CDs, jewelry, clothing and various and sundry items for sale in our gallery-bookshop! All sales support the Levantine Cultural Center's arts and educational programming in 2012. Free refreshments and gift wrapping, up to 50% off all items in stock! Get your holiday shopping done early, stop by the Levantine Cultural Center...

Revolution in Syria: Factors and Forces

Subtitle: 
local Syrian gives talk at Levantine Cultural Center
By Tony Litwinko

Samir Twair, Syrian activist, journalist and correspondent for the Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, spoke at the Levantine Center on Sunday, November 6, 2011, about the history of and current situation in Syria.

The talk was one in the series "Progressive Conversations on Israel/Palestine and U.S. Foreign Policy in the Middle East," sponsored jointly by the Levantine Center, LA Jews for Peace, Jewish Voice for Peace, and Friends of Sabeel Los Angeles and Orange County.

The Budding of Islamic Democracies

Subtitle: 
America, wake-up and smell the roses
By Dana Siegelman


Much of what Americans think of the Middle East and our foreign policy toward it over the past ten years has been a response to 9/11. This is understandable. President Bush's neoconservative approach to the "War on Terror" was advocated by those who believed spreading democracy was essentially spreading peace. In a 2003 speech, Bush assessed that "Stability at the expense of freedom, has brought us neither stability nor freedom."  In other words, supporting corrupt dictators in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) did not create friendlier or stronger economic partners (except when that partnership centered around oil.)

After 9/11: A Global World View

Subtitle: 
The author of "Destiny Disrupted" sees the world through Islamic eyes even as the east-west narrative becomes more complex
By Tamim Ansary


For decades or perhaps even centuries, disparate societies around the globe have been growing more and more intertwined. A single world culture is emerging; or at least the history of the world as told in different places is merging into the single history of us all.

The Arab Revolution Hits the Sunset Strip

Subtitle: 
Middle East metal bands Acraussicada and Massive Scar Era play the Whisky

By Mark LeVine

It's not often that heavy metal bands from the Middle East make it to the States, but in July the Sunset Strip witnessed what was surely the first meeting of three powerhouses of Middle Eastern metal on its hallowed ground—Egypt, Iraq and Iran.

Musician-scholar Mark LeVineMusician-scholar Mark LeVineFor well over a millennium they have been rival centers of Islamic culture, and more recently have been political rivals. Much more recently they have been home to three of the most intense metal scenes not merely in the Middle East, but in the world.

Nothing makes for a good metal scene like war and oppression, and Iran and Iraq have had about as much of both as any country could take. Egypt has been safe from war the last three and a half decades, but the mercifully ended rein of Hosni Mubarak was among the region's most effectively repressive for most of that period.

After 9/11, A Community Roundtable

Event Details
Date/Time: 
Sep 11 2011 5:00pm - 8:00pm
Price: 
Suggested donation $11 (students $5) includes light refreshments (no-one turned away for lack of funds) to benefit the center
Where: 
Levantine Cultural Center
5998 W. Pico Blvd
Los Angeles CA 90035
ample street parking
between La Cienega and Fairfax
Subtitle: 
artists, activists and general public gather for an open dialogue on our lives since 9/11

Activists, artists, writers and members of the general public are invited to participate in a community roundtable discussion on the events of 9/11, including the invasion and occupation of Afghanistan and Iraq, the passing of the USA Patriot Act, the "war on terror," Islamophobia, the Green Movement in Iran in 2009, and this year's Arab Spring and just what we can look forward to in the months and years ahead.