I know. It’s creepy. I have no idea who wakes up craving so much ghee, fat, sugar, and cream. Fortunately for myself, I’m safely tucked away in Garden’s Street, with no 7alawanjeyeh anywhere near.
January 22, 2012 at 6:02 pm
· Filed under Amman, Seriously
Over and over again, the same damn issue.
Article 6 (i) of our Constitution stipulates: “There shall be no discrimination between Jordanians as regards to their rights and duties on grounds of race, language or religion”.
As a Jordanian woman, I am equal to a Jordanian man. I MUST be able to give my Jordanian nationality, i.e. my IDENTITY as a Jordanian, to my children. As a Jordanian woman, I am proud of being a Jordanian woman. As a Jordanian woman, I want my children to also be Jordanian.
As a Jordanian woman, I am a productive part of Jordanian society, working equal hours (if not more) than my fellow Jordanian brothers. As a Jordanian woman, I pay my taxes. As a Jordanian woman, I practiced my voting rights in the Jordanian parliament.
I hold no other citizenship. I was born in Jordan. I was educated in Jordan’s universities. I live in Jordan. I am an active part of the Jordanian economy. I am an active part of the Jordanian society. I LOVE Jordan.
So why is it that as a Jordanian woman, I can’t pass on my PROUD Jordanian citizenship to my children?
It is sexist, it is unjust, it is greedy.
As a Jordanian woman, I DEMAND my right to pass on my Jordanian nationality to my children.
January 22, 2012 at 12:41 pm
· Filed under Pop Culture
I know I don’t need to illustrate how frickin’ awesome the Internet is, but my god, when I find such projects, I fall in love with the Internet over and over again.
This Adele “World Cover” was created by seamlessly integrating 70 different “Rolling in the Deep” covers from YouTube. That’s 70 different voices, 70 different styles, 70 different ages, 70 different people, 70 different accents. It’s AMAZING. Lovey-dovey kind of amazing.
Hashima Island was once a coal mining facility owned by Mitsubishi Motors, and it was once the most densely populated place on earth, packing over 13,000 people into each square kilometre of its residential high-risers. It operated from 1887 until 1974, after which the coal industry fell into decline and the mines were shut for good.
With their jobs gone and no other reason to stay in this mini urban nightmare, almost overnight the entire population fled back to the mainland, leaving most of their stuff behind to rot.
The result? Something beautiful and yet really weird.