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VIDEO CATALOGUE MIDDLE EAST AND ISLAMIC WORLD VIDEO COLLECTIONThe Middle East and Islamic World Video Collection is owned by the Hagop Kevorkian Center for Near Eastern Studies of New York University. Film collection location: The Hagop Kevorkian Center New York University 50 Washington Square South 255 Sullivan Street New York, N.Y. 10012-1073 (212) 998-8873 Video Collection Film and Borrowing: contact Zeynep Bilginsoy at zb278@nyu.edu TABLE OF CONTENTS:Film and video reviews are provided when possible by university faculty and staff members, and by other scholars in the field. If a film is reviewed, the reviewer's initials are indicated in brackets after the text. A key to reviewers is provided at the back of the guide. A description not followed by brackets indicates that the distributor's or director's summary has been used. The following format is used to indicate further information about the film: DREAMS OF HIND AND CAMILIA -- Title 1989 - Year 115 min. - Running Time 2" - Format (2" and 3/4" are videotape formats; 16 mm is film) Color - Color Arabic w/English subtitles - Language of film M,H,U,G - Recommended audience (Middle School, High School, Undergraduate, Graduate) The Center owns more than 175 films and videotapes which are lent free of charge to universities, colleges, secondary and middle schools in the tri-state area (New York, New Jersey, Connecticut). Because we want to be fair to all who borrow our resources, we ask that you help us by respecting the following guidelines:
A - H AFGHANISTAN: CAPTIVES OF THE WARLORDS: Al-NAKBA: THE PALESTINIAN CATASTROPHE: 1981, 28 min., 3/4", Color, H,U,G. This upbeat survey of Arab immigration to the United States since the mid-19th century focuses on the problems faced and the adjustments made to become Americans. The imaginative use of old photographs as well as contemporary slides and interviews in communities ranging from Colorado to Connecticut, with special attention paid to the larger contemporary ethnic groups in Illinois and Michigan, is enhanced by an excellent musical score. [UNC] Wolfe and Friedlander for UCLA. ARAMCO AT FIFTY: 1993, 53 min., 2", Color, B&W, M,H. This promotional video focuses on the development of the American oil industry (and ARAMCO) in Saudi Arabia, beginning in 1933 with the first geological expeditions. Most valuable are early photos of exploration camps, regional topography, and the Arabian peninsula before development. The tape makes for a heroic tale, but as one might expect, fails to place American efforts in the larger context of oil exploration in the Arabian peninsula, Iran and Iraq that began with the British in the 1890s, and was joined by the Dutch, French and Americans in the next century. Briefly addresses the economics of oil and its effects on Saudi Arabia, preferring to concentrate on the good fortune it has brought to the kingdom. The Story of Oil is recommended for a history of oil and related development in the region, and Cities of Salt for a critique of the oil industry and its effects on Saudi Arabia. [AGF] Produced by ARAMCO. ART AND THE ISLAMIC WORLD: 1993, 32 min, 2", Color, H,U,G. An excellent and easily accessible video that uses as illustrations slides of architecture, art and fine arts from all over the Islamic world, including Macedonia, Nigeria, North Africa, Western Asia and China. Each slide is helpfully labeled with a country location and century, allowing even those unfamiliar with Islamic art to note differences by region and time period. The narration begins with a brief introduction to Islam, offering theories on why Muhammad distrusted the arts of figurative sculpture and painting. The film discusses secular and religious themes, figures and styles characterizing art and architecture in Islamic countries, and helpfully points out that the idea of "Islamic art" is as hard to define as is the idea of Christian art. A concise, useful introduction that successfully conveys the breadth and variation of art in the Islamic world. [AGF] Produced by Walter Denny and Carel Bertram for Middle East Institute. AYASOPHIA: 1991 , 26 min, 2", Color, M,H,U. A visit to Ayasofia includes a historical overview of this great monument completed in 537 for the Emperor Justinian as a church, and converted to a mosque after the Ottoman conquest of Constantinople in 1453. Explores the treasures and tales of the spectacular building in Istanbul, now a museum whose gardens house the largest Ottoman royal tombs, containing the bodies of a number of sultans and princes. Directed by Suha Arin for MTV-Istanbul. BAB EL-OUED CITY : 1994, 93 min., 2", Color. A description of this film is not yet available. BATTLE OF ALGIERS: 1966, 125 min., 2", B/W, French & Arabic w/English subtitles, H,U,G. This vivid reenactment of the Algerian struggle for independence from France, 1954-1962, is presented in documentary style from the point of view of the FLN fighters. It graphically presents the contrast both architecturally and culturally between the medina, the old city, and the European metropolis, with the FLN employing elements of both cultures in their struggle against the French army. The brutalization of the French recruits and the descent of all combatants into terrorism make this film a classic of cinema verité. Battle of Algiers was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Film and received 11 international awards. [Images and Echoes] Directed by Gillo Pontecorvo. BEING MUSLIM IN INDIA: 1984, 40 min., 2", Color. Some Hindi w/English subtitles H,U,G Outstanding study of a polygamous Muslim family in Lucknow. Qasim, a devout Sunni Muslim, and his family -- three wives and children -- all discuss the importance of their faith and the centrality of the Qu'ran. The first wife has observed seclusion since she was a small child, but the other two wives give frank descriptions of their roles, their relationships towards Qasim, each other and their children. Narrator makes clear that having more than one wife is an uncommon practice in Islam, but has chosen the family because of the many perspectives of its members. Through interviews with this family and with other residents, the film gently demystifies the grand symbols of Islam: rows of men in prayer, minarets and mosques, and the Qu'ran. [EFB] South Asian Center, University of Wisconsin BEIRUT TO BOSNIA: MUSLIMS AND THE WEST:
BETWEEN THE LINES: A description of this film is not yet available. BOOK OF FESTIVITIES [SURNAMEH OF MURAD III]: 1960, 21 min., 2", 3/4", Color, H,U. This short film looks at the album of miniatures produced to record the 40-day celebration organized in Istanbul by Sultan Murad III in 1582. This type of illuminated documentation continued the tradition of earlier shahnamehs (books of kings) produced in Iran, which became national epics. This particular book was commissioned by Murad III to display his wealth to the world, but also reveals a wealth of human detail: the sultan's son coming forward to kiss his hand, displays of craft by guildsmen, mock battles on horseback, wrestling, and the lighting of fireworks on the last day. The narration is simple, composed mainly of basic references to what is pictured without giving much historical, political or cultural context. This film could be well-used with a directed discussion of the period. [AGF] Directed and produced by Ipsiroglu. BOUJAD: A NEST IN THE HEAT: 1994, 90 mins., 2", Color, U,G. A close and at times anguishing look at issues of separation, independence and return, this film follows the director home to his family's village in Morocco, as he prepares to tell them that he won't be returning again. The director's exploration of family relationships is self-conscious and at times painfully honest, including the audience in the most private moments with his family. The film offers an intimate look at domestic spaces and religious rituals (included is a lengthy prayer sequence during a graveside visit to grandparents) and illustrates well the complexity of inter-family relationships, especially when compounded by one member's break with family traditions and expectations. [AGF] Directed by Hakim A. Belabbes. BREAD AND CHOCOLATE: 119 BULLETS + THREE: B UT YOU SPEAK SUCH GOOD ENGLISH BYE BYE: CAMERA d'ARABE - The Young Arab Cinema: 1987, 60 min., 2", Color, B/W, In English w/some subtitled Arabic, U,G. Camera d'Arabe relates the story of auteur Arab cinema existence, from the 1950s through the early 1980s. Using a series of interviews with major filmmakers (including Egyptian director Youssef Chahine), lengthy film clips, and informative narration, Boughedir has created a superb introduction to new Arab cinema. He traces its genesis from liberation themes linked with independence movements of the 1950s and early 1960s, through the flowering of a variety of topics including women's position in society, injustice and occupation; and finally self-examination and despair prompted by the post-1967 situation in the Arab world. He stresses the primary nature of politics in the Arab filmmaker's conscience, and touches on crucial economic dimensions of filmmaking, such as the difficulty of establishing a distribution network to compete with readily available foreign films. [AGF] Directed by Farid Boughedir. CANTICLES OF THE STONE: 1990, 110 min., 2", Color. A description of this film is not yet available. CELEBRATING THE PROPHET IN THE REMEMBRANCE OF GOD: SUFI DHIKR IN EGYPT: 1997, 39 min., 2", Color, U,G. This video is useful for instructors wishing to give students some sense of the rituals of dhikr C the elaborate and prayerful recitation of God's names by Sufi Muslims C as performed in different settings with different participants in Egypt. It focuses specifically on two religious singers of contrasting types. The commentary stresses varying interpretations of the place of dhikr and of Sufism in Islamic practice, addressing disputes with some ulema, Islamic reformists, and radicals. The accompanying transcription is very useful, though the video's commentary is delivered in a monotone, and the color and photography are often poor. "Celebrating the Prophet" is probably best used in discussion groups to illustrate particular points. See I am a Sufi, I am a Muslim for dhikr as performed in Pakistan, Turkey, India, and Macedonia. [MG] Directed by Valerie J. Hoffman. CHANGING LIVES: WOMEN OF THE MIDDLE EAST: 1993, 15 min., 2", Color, M,H,U. Directed by Colleen Caden, an MA alumna in the Joint Program in Near Eastern Studies and Journalism, this polished, professional short film investigates the diversity of roles C traditional and nontraditional C that women choose in contemporary Middle Eastern society, and explores the rewards and repercussions of these choices. She interviews three women: a young, university-educated Muslim Irani continuing her studies at NYU; a former prima ballerina from Egypt teaching at NYU (also a Muslim); and an older Egyptian, Christian woman whose economic status goes undiscussed. The women ponder lifestyle choices and how their decisions were shaped by their views and experiences of women's roles in society, and by paternal relationships. [CNES] Directed by Colleen Caden. Produced by NYU's Journalism Dept. CHARULATA: THE LONELY WIFE: 1964, 117 min., 2", B&W, Bengali w/English subtitles. A description of this film is not yet available. CHATILA: CHILDREN OF HEAVEN: CHILDREN OF SHATILA: CHRONICLES OF THE YEARS OF EMBER: CIRCLE WITHIN THE SQUARE: THE CITIES OF ISLAM: FEZ: 1987, 24 min., 2", Color, H,U. This film goes further than its counterpart on Cairo in suggesting that Islamic cities are stuck in the Middle Ages, explaining that Fez houses a "medieval society living almost unchanged" since its founding in 808 AD. Though the film concentrates on Fez as a center of learning during the Middle Ages and emphasizes the exchange of ideas through traveling scholars, craftsmen, religious dignitaries and merchants; neither that exchange nor 43 years of French rule keep Fez from being described as a "living museum." Despite this major fault, the film is useful for its excellent footage of the architecture of the city (with special focus on the city's oldest mosque and school, founded by two women) and the detailed working of metal, leather and textiles. Also treats fairly accurately the importance of the family unit and women's roles. [AGF] Directed by John Dooley for Polonius Production. THE CITIES OF ISLAM: ISTANBUL: 1988, 28 min., 2", Color, H,U. The most comprehensive of the series of three, this film gives a useful historic overview for beginning students, describing the city's successive eras as Byzantium, Constantinople and finally Istanbul, and visiting monuments from each period. Includes visits to the Topkapi palace, Aya Sofia, Blue Mosque and Mosque of Suleiman with (at times overgeneralized) discussions of the architecture of mosques. Includes engaging street scenes illustrating the vitality of the city: a tea vendor serving a customer from his portable urn, men gathered in a shop to smoke hookahs, and wrestlers competing on Prince's Islands. Each of these three films would profit from pairing with The Islamic City. [AGF] Directed by John Dooley for Polonius Production. CITIES OF SALT: 1992, 38 min., 2", Color, Arabic w/English subtitles and narration, H,U,G. This fascinating profile of novelist Abd el-Rahman Munif and his series of five books, beginning with Cities of Salt, includes interviews with Munif, dramatizations and readings of his novels, and pre- and post-oil footage and photographs. Cities of Salt is the story of the destruction of a desert community by American oil men; successive books in the series follow the development of the surreal society left in its place. Munif's sharp criticism (he calls the oil industry "alien...unconnected to what surrounds it") misses neither the British who handed out oil concessions, the Americans who took them, nor the shortsighted Saudi rulers who allowed it all to happen. His critique provides a sharp contrast to the myth that oil has meant wealth and happiness for all Saudi Arabians. (Showing this title alongside ARAMCO AT FIFTY provides an opportunity for critical analysis for younger students.) Note: There is a two-minute space on the tape between parts I and II. [AGF] Directed by Christopher Spencer & Patrick Matthews. Produced by Tariq Ali. CITIZEN BISHARA: CLOSE, CLOSED, CLOSURE:
CRUSADES THE DEAD WEIGHT OF A QUARREL HANGS: DREAMING A NATION: THE KURDS
THE DYNASTY: THE NEHRU-GANDHI STORY, Part I + II: EMBROIDERED CANTICLES [Cantiques Brodes] Morocco, Body and Soul series 1989, 26 min., 2", Color, Some Arabic, Hebrew &French w/subtitles, H,U,G. This concert film features Moroccan musical masters Rabbi Haim Louk and Abd el-Sadek Chekara performing mystical songs from the matrouz tradition. With its Andalusian roots, matrouz is a shared Muslim-Jewish musical form incorporating Arabic and Hebrew poetry, and reflecting the centuries-old link between Jewish and Muslim societies in North Africa. Includes some discussion of the similarities of the poetical texts, and an intimate feel for the musical and personal relationship between these two performers. [AGF] Directed by Izza Genini. 500 DUNAM ON THE MOON: 1994, 24 min., 2", Color, Arabic w/English subtitles, H,U,G. Produced in conjunction with a traveling exhibit by Arab women artists, this film interviews 17 participants and shows examples of their work. The artists discuss their work in the context of feminist expression, and address issues such as traditions in their societies, ecology, Islam and human rights. Narrated by Casey Kasem. Directed by Zuheir al-Fiqih for International Council for Women in the Arts. FOUR WOMEN IN EGYPT: 1997, 90 min., 2", Color, French and Arabic w/English subtitles. A description of this film is not yet available. FRONTIERS OF DREAMS AND FEARS: GHAZEIA: GOSPEL TRUTH (Testament: The Bible and History): 1988, 52 min., 2", Color, U,G. This program shows the historical remains of the time and place, perhaps of the life, of Jesus and describes how the Christian Bible came into being. The program begins in Jerusalem to find the sources of early Christian literature and traces the evidence for the dating and attribution of the four Gospels and of other contemporary writings like the Gospel of Thomas. The focus shifts to Rome, to the persecutions begun by Nero that led to martyrdoms throughout the Roman world, and closes with the compilation of the Bible's books made by Iranaeus, who rendered Christianity and its writings accessible to the Empire and, eventually, its Emperor. Films for the Humanities. GRASS : A NATION'S BATTLE FOR LIFE: 1927, 1992, 70 min., 2", B&W, H,U,G. This classic documentary follows the migration of the Bakhtiari tribe of Persia (now Iran) across the Zagros mountains in search of green pastures for their sheep and goats. Twice a year more than 50,000 people and half a million animals surmounted seemingly impossible obstacles, including torrential rivers and 15,000 foot high mountains. Includes early sequences of a caravan and desert patrol in Anatolia. This restored and full-length version also has a new Iranian score. [CNES] Directed by Merian Cooper, Ernest Schoedsack, & Marguerite Harrison for Paramount. Restored by Milestone Film &Video. GULF WAR: OPERATION DESERT STORM, THE COMPLETE STORY: 1991, 120 min., 2", Color, H,U. This video serves as a record of the episode in the Persian Gulf. It examines the context in which the conflict occurred, the development of "Desert Shield", and the escalation towards a full-scale military war. With the lines of battle drawn, the two protagonists emerged as Norman Schwarzkopf and Saddam Hussein. A profile of each is included in the program, helping to bring into focus the pressures and dilemmas each faced. Produced by Independent Television News. HALFMOON: 1995, 90 min., 2", Color, English/Arabic w/English subtitles. A description of this film is not yet available. HAMSIN (DESERT WIND): 1983, 90 min., 2", Color, Hebrew & Arabic w/English subtitles, U,G. In this heavy-handed feature, Gedalia, an Israeli farmer living in Galilee, works alongside Haled, an Arab laborer he has employed and who shares his hopes for building a cattle ranch. A kind of friendship develops, so that Haled trusts Gedalia's motives when, amid reports of government plans to confiscate Arab land, he offers to purchase the farm of his Arab neighbor as protection. Haled continues to work for Gedalia, even after other Arab workers abandon the farmer and warn Haled of his "real" motives. As tensions rise over the confiscations, Haled finds himself caught between his friends and his belief in Gedalia, who tries to protect Haled from harassment by neighboring Israeli farmers. At the same time, Haled is drawn into an affair with Gedalia's visiting sister, and as one might predict, a violent outcome looms. [AGF] Directed by Daniel Wachsmann. HANAN ASHRAWI: A WOMAN OF HER TIME HAPPY BIRTHDAY, MR. MOGRABI: THE HAREM PROJECT: AN ISLAMIC ARTS EXPERIENCE: THE HORSE: HUMAN WEAPON: I AM A SUFI, I AM A MUSLIM: 1994, 52 min., 2", Color, some Arabic w/English subtitles, M,H,U,G.This Belgian production is a solid introduction of Sufism, a branch of Islam that is less known in the West than the more mainstream Sunni and Shi-i practices. Focuses primarily on Sufism as it is practiced in parts of Pakistan and Macedonia, but also visits India and Turkey (Rumi is not discussed). Abundant footage of zikr traditions, with cogent explanation of saint worship, importance of qawwali music, and attainment of the ecstatic state. Gives context to various orders and traditions, discussing for instance how Sufis' roles in Ottoman military processions have influenced the kinds of musical rhythms one hears in Macedonian zikrs. Includes performance by famed Pakistani singer Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan. Warning: Includes graphic scenes of tongue, cheek, and body piercing during the ecstatic state that may be unsuitable for younger students. [AGF] Directed by Dirk Dumon. I MISS THE SUN: 1984, 20 min., 2", Colorm M,H,U. In this tale of a modern day exodus, Mary Halawani profiles her grandmother, who left Egypt in the wake of rising nationalism and anti-Zionism in 1962. She was the last one in her family to leave Egypt and join her children, who had already moved to America. Using the Passover seder as the backdrop, Halawani examines the matriarch of a close Middle Eastern family, and the contrasts between the values and textures of life there and in America. Her grandmother misses the warmth and closeness of families in the society she left behind, as this is vividly portrayed in the care she lavishes on the elaborate and bountiful meal that brings her children and their families to her home each year. [AGF] Directed by Mary Halawani. I SHALL SALUTE THE SUN ONCE AGAIN: 1998, 55 min., 2", Color. A description of this film is not yet available. I WANT A SOLUTION: INTERVIEW WITH HASHEMI RAFSANJANI (ON CBS & C-SPAN): INTEZAAR (Waiting): 1995, 26 min., 2", Color, Arabic w/English subtitles, H,U,G. Stemming from the director's personal experience of growing up in a Gazan refugee camp, the film offers a critical and provocative scrutiny of these camps, which were established by the UN in 1948 as temporary housing. Interviewing family and friends, Masharawi explores the despair of this semi-permanent condition of existence. Directed by Rashid Masharawi. INTRODUCTION TO THE ARAB WORLD: *Study Guide available with video. 1988, 48 min., 2", Color, M,H,U. This three-part survey of the Arab world - "Overview," "Islam," and "Arab Society Today" - combines slides and film clips to introduce the peoples and places of the region and to address its most important concerns. The first 15-minute segment details the full panorama of ethnic diversity: non-Arabs in the Middle East, Arabs who are not Muslims, and non-Arab Muslims. Hard-to-read maps are the only drawback of this section. "Islam" is set in a global context with lucid explanations of the basic tenets, and recognition of the Judaeo-Christian continuum. The last segment offers a lively survey of the contemporary and older Arab world, with emphasis on the accelerating tempo of today's transformations of cities, agriculture, education, health care, and communication. The review of the Palestinian-Israeli conflict and European colonization is incisive and unbiased. (The guidebook is an excellent supplementary resource, including a world history timeline, brief histories of major Near Eastern dynasties, maps, and classroom exercises.) [EFB] Directed by Leslie Schmida Nucho for AMIDEAST. INTRODUCTION TO THE END OF AN ARGUMENT (INTIFADA): SPEAKING FOR ONESELF...SPEAKING FOR OTHERS: 1990, 45 min., 2", Color, U,G. Combining "found artifacts" from Europe, the United States and Israel -- news sound bites, movie clips, cartoons, pop songs and documentary footage shot in the West Bank and Gaza Strip -- End of An Argument critiques Western-based representations of Arab culture. The video artists cleverly mimic the Western tableau in a mix of fragmented stereotypes that illustrate how we impose our own narratives on the Middle East in fiction and nonfiction alike. Underlines well how this stream of simplistic materials merges into a blurry but insidious ethnocentric consensus that Arabs are somehow less worthy and civilized than "us," whomever "us" may be. [AGF] Directed by Elia Sulieman and Jayce Salloum. IRAN: PAST, PRESENT AND FUTURE: 1992, 32 min., 2", Color, M,H. This promotional video views like a travel guide with historical background. Describes geographic features, crops, industries, education, architecture, scientific achievements, and gives a generic history of rule beginning with the Aryans. Most useful sections feature musical performances, instrumental and the singing of poetry. [AGF] Produced by the Permanent Mission of Iran to the United Nations. IRANIAN JOURNEY: 2000, 60 min., 2", Color. A description of this film is not available. IRAQ: THE CRADLE OF CIVILIZATION (The Legacy Series): 1991, 57 min., 2", Color, H,U,G. In another installment of the six-part PBS Legacy series, Michael Wood visits Iraq, and traces the region's early history as home to some of the oldest and most productive cities in the world. His itinerary includes Irbil, the oldest continuously inhabited city in the world; Baghdad, which became one of the greatest cultural centers after its founding by Arab Muslims in the 8th century; Mosel, once a center for Eastern Christians, and many other sites. He skillfully traces and interweaves the histories of early inhabitants and of religious groups from the days of Ur to the present. Overall, a carefully detailed presentation with fewer intrusive acts than the installment on Egypt. [AGF] Produced and directed by Michael Wood for PBS. IRAQ THEN AND NOW: THE UNHEARD VOICES OF IRAQI WOMEN:
THE ISLAMIC CITY (World of Islam series): 1988, 30 min., 2", Color, H,U,G. Astute and able narration marks this exploration of cities established under Islam and enduring as primarily Islamic centers. The film visits cities founded during several periods of Islamic rule by different ruling dynasties: Kairouan, Tunisia built as a frontier town during the first generation of Islam; Istanbul, Turkey established in the 15th century under the Ottomans; and so on, including cities in India, Morocco, Yemen, Egypt, Iran and Syria. Covers the variety of architectural styles and histories while explaining the unifying features of Islamic cities: the mosque and related buildings (especially schools), and a center's often inward-turning configurations. Brief and insightful treatment given to role of women in society as defined by the Qur'an and as adapted to 20th century lives. Only a few stumbles, such as labeling pre-Islamic Arabs "warrior tribes in search of wealth." [AGF] JERUSALEM, THE HOLY CITY: This four-part series examines the political history, Biblical history and architecture of the three great religions that regard Jerusalem as a holy city. A fair treatment of each with few biases, though it inexplicably chooses to accord Islam less coverage. Focuses more on political (i.e. who controlled the city) and Biblical history than does A Common Ground. [AGF] Directed by Alan Rosenthal for Boston University Productions. Part I: A Collage of Sacred and Secular History: 1987, 51 min., 2", Color, H,U. An overview of the three religions' history in and relationship with Jerusalem which highlights much of what is explained in detail in the other three films, this could be well-used as a more economic look at the three faiths in Jerusalem. Because it short shrifts Islam, however, this tape should be used with Jerusalem and the Muslim Tradition. [AGF] Part II: Jerusalem and the Jewish Tradition: 1987, 44 min., 2", Color, H,U. Focuses mainly on Biblical history with a large section on the archaeology of the City of David, and an overlong section on the water system. The problems of modern political history are elided (the film refers simply to "reclamation of Jerusalem for the Jewish people"). [AGF] Part III: Jerusalem and the Christian Tradition: 1987, 44 min., 2", Color, H,U. Again largely focuses on Biblical history. Exhaustive and well-filmed architectural details, visits to major churches of several branches, and a station-by-station walk along the Via Dolorosa. A very thorough overview of the branches of Christianity present in Jerusalem, the differences (even conflicts) among them, and their places and rights in the Church of the Holy Sepulchre. [AGF] Part IV: Jerusalem and the Muslim Tradition: 1987, 25 min., 2", Color, H,U. An accurate, though comparatively short history of both Jerusalem's significance in Islam and in the history of Muslim Arab and Ottoman Turk empires. Thorough description and detailed footage of major monuments, mosques and the ruins of an early Arab palace complex built to serve pilgrims. Somewhat distracting is narrator (and BU Religion Professor) James Purvis's mispronunciation of Arabic words. [AGF] JERUSALEM: OF HEAVEN AND EARTH "THE CENTER OF THE WORLD": 1983, 25 min., 2", Color, M,H. A weak, unfocused work, this video borders on racism in its portrayal of Muslim Arabs in Jerusalem and does not add much otherwise to our general knowledge. While purporting to be about Jerusalem's central role in Judaism and Christianity, it begins with visits (led by a tourist guide) to several pilgrimage sites, then becomes a description of Israeli life in the city subtly (and unfavorably) compared with a very limited view of Arab life. No mention is made of the Jerusalem's central place in Islam. Use Jerusalem, The Holy City or A Common Ground instead. [AGF] Directed by John Jacob and Richard Tombelson for Nomad International Films. JERUSALEM: OF HEAVEN AND EARTH "CITY OF 100 GATES": 1983, 25 min., 2", Color, M,H. A film exploring daily life, festivals and rituals in Mea Shearim (100 gates), a Hasidic community outside the Old City in Jerusalem. Notable for footage inside a home and schools of the community, many of whose inhabitants will not allow themselves to be photographed. Human details (a young boy's ritual haircut, men shopping for holiday plants and building an outdoor shelter for Sukkot) add to understanding of Hasidic community and Judaism in general. Not much historical or political information and somewhat scattershot in delivery, but a useful cultural document. [AGF] Directed by Jacob & Tombelson for Nomad International Films. THE JEWS OF DJERBA: 1977, 26 min., 2", Color, M,H,U. T hough dated and very conventional in its approach, this video contains some beautiful, lengthy footage of religious and secular life on the Tunisian island of Djerba, where Jews first arrived in the 6th century B.C. The video features many scenes of daily life, especially the activities of women, who are shown making bread, weaving and embroidering, sweeping yards clean, and preparing meals. Also includes footage of men reading from the Torah and performing other religious activities inside one of the oldest synagogues on the island. Gives an informative, brief history of Jews' presence there and the structure of the community. Drawbacks are misinformed generalizations ("Jews have been on Djerba for 25 centuries...life has changed little in all that time.") and the fact that while people do speak in the film, their words are not translated and they are not interviewed, which tends to make them objects of the narrator's observations rather than participants in the film's images. Directed by Alain Cohen & Georges Nizan for Jewish Media Service. JOURNAL FROM TEHRAN: 1987, 20 min., 2", Color, U,G. This short documentary looks at Iran through the eyes of an exile returning after seven years abroad to a country under the enforcement of Islamic law and still fighting the Iran-Iraq war. Although leery of her reception, the filmmaker finds herself comfortable in familiar surroundings until she senses the constant threat of the Revolutionary Guards on the lookout for "improperly dressed women or punky males." The video is divided into four segments: introduction to Tehran; differences between northern and southern sections (Westernized vs. traditional cultural forces); celebration of Norooz (the Persian New Year); and religion and war. North Tehran, the former "European-style playground," is mainly deserted and South Tehran has become the bustling heart of the city, new seat of power and target of Iraqi missiles. Little details are telling: one scene shows women doffing chadors to reveal chic fashions at a mixed gathering to celebrate Norooz, the pre-Islamic spring festival of the new year which the government has declared un-Islamic. [EFB] Directed and produced by Perhseng Sadegh-Vaziri. THE KEY: 1986, 76 min., 2", Color, Farsi dialogue w/English subtitles. A description of this film is not yet available. KHURASANI KURDISH DANCES: n.d., 9 min., 2", Color, M,H,U. The Khurasani Kurds are a community of nearly 1.7 million people deported from western Kurdistan to Khurasan by Persia during the 16th to 18th centuries. Their exclave now straddles the Iran-Turkmenistan-Afghanistan border regions, spilling into all three countries. Having been effectively cut off from other Kurds geographically and historically, they have retained costumes and customs long dead in other Kurdish communities. For instance, the costumes and dances show in this film have an Anatolian, even East European flavor. The dances have been choreographed and staged, though not as much as this film might lead a viewer to assume; Khurasani Kurdish dances are orderly affairs on their own. Costumes are authentic, despite their neat, elaborate layering and ornamentation. [MI] Produced by the Ministry of Arts and Culture of Iran. KIBBUTZ 2000: 1985, 30 min., 2", Color. A description of this film is not yet available. THE KILLING OF SADAT: WHY WAS CAIRO CALM?: 1982, 60 min., 2", Color, H,U,G. This news program is a perceptive examination of Sadat's politics, economic policies and persona in Egypt up until his assassination in 1981, expertly compared with the hero-like portrayal of Sadat in the Western, specifically American press. Carefully traces the selective impact of Sadat's economic and political decisions, which created a wealthy entrepreneurial class replacing the old land-holding rich, but brought little change for the average person. Focuses also on reactions to alignment with the West and to peace accords with Israel; and on alienation of other Arab countries. Includes intelligent, informative interviews with Egyptian journalists, writers, former ministers and advisers to Sadat. Overall, an excellent introduction to conditions in Egypt in the '70s and '80s, with eerie echoes for today's political situation. [AGF] Directed by Ofra Bikel for WBGH TV (Boston). THE KIRGHIZ OF AFGHANISTAN: 1975, 30 min., 2", Color, H,U. Cut off from the majority of their kinsmen living in China and the Soviet Union by closed borders, a group of 3,000 Kirghiz nomads has lived since the 1950s in isolation deep in the Afghan Pamirs. This film explores the economic, political and social power of one of their khans, Rahman Qul, who exercises total control over his herders and their families through a system called amanat, or "entrusting." The film captures the bitter reflections of a young herder in the amanat system, and focuses on the particularly difficult lives of Kirghiz women living on "the roof of the world." Superb photography, extraordinary sensitivity, and remarkable direction have created a haunting film. N.B.: Although the film does not indicate it, the group fled Pakistan in 1978 as a result of the Communist revolution; their exodus is part of another film, Afghan Exodus, available for viewing at NYU's Avery Fisher Center. [RDM] Directed by Thomas Howe w/Nazif Shahrani, anthropologist and consultant. KUWAIT: A DREAM SUSPENDED: 1990, 30 min., 2", Color, M,H. This well-photographed promotional film is valuable for its film clips from the 1940's and 1950's. The idealistic portrayal of modern Kuwait with an active parliament and freedom of the press is rather cloying. The final aerial panoramas form a background for a legend describing the Iraqi invasion in August 1990, and the ensuing devastation. [UNC] Produced by Michael McKinnon for Kufic Films. LA NOUBA DES FEMMES DU MONT-CHENOUA: LAWRENCE OF ARABIA: 1962, 216 min., 2", Color, H,U,G. Winner of seven Academy Awards, including Best Picture of 1962, this epic commercial film recreates the exploits of famed British officer, T.E. Lawrence, who, assigned to Arabia during World War I, unites the warring Arab factions into a guerrilla front that endures both brilliant victories and eventual defeat against the Ottoman Empire. With Peter O'Toole as Lawrence, and starring Alec Guinness and Anthony Quinn among a host of others. Directed by David Lean. Produced by Sam Spiegel. LE LION DE DIEU: mid 1970s, 50 min., 2", Color, H,U,G. For this video, professional actors from Tehran staged a carefully orchestrated performance of ta'ziyeh plays in the village of Natanz, Iran. The ta'ziyeh plays narrate and relive the martyrdom of 680 of Husayn, grandson of the Prophet Muhammad; they are enacted during the first 10 days of the Muslim month of Muharram. Though the performances did not take place during Muharram, and the sequence of plays does not follow the order usually established during this religious festival, this video does provide a valuable -- and rare -- documentary record of ta'ziyeh dramatic representations. Includes interviews with the actors, the oldest of whom has been performing the plays for 50 years. Directed by Jean Baronnet. LEILA: LIFE & NOTHING MORE: LIVING IN PARADISE: LIVING ISLAM: WHAT IT MEANS TO BE A MUSLIM IN TODAY'S WORLD: 1993, 50 min. each, 2", Color, H,U. This series was created to answer the question posed in the title and to survey the confrontations of Islamic societies with the West. The on-site photography in Nigeria, Iran, Mali, Turkey, Indonesia, Pakistan, India, the United Kingdom, Uzbekistan and Egypt constantly reinforces the fact that Islam is a global religion not limited to the Arab heartland. Host Akbar Ahmed, an anthropologist at Cambridge University, puts a disproportionate emphasis on his native Pakistan. The ethnographic vignettes in this ambitious series are of great value. It is up to the instructor, however, to provide explanatory details, to place stories in context, to expose bias. [UNC] Produced by BBC-TV. Part I: Foundations Filmed in Egypt, Mali, France, England, Jordan, Israel and Iraq: Part I examines the tenets of Islam in the context of the life of Muhammed, and the fashion in which Muslims around the world balance faith and everyday life. [UNC] Part II: The Challenge of the Past: Examines four major Muslim empires of the past -- Andalusian Spain, Ottoman Turkey, Mughal India and Safavid Persia -- and how religious confrontation shaped them. Also looks at a modern example of identity crisis: Pakistan as an Islamic state. [UNC] Part III: Struggling with Modernity: This film examines the definition of the word "modernity" as a Western concept of technical prowess, and in Third World terms. Akbar reflects on the tensions within many Islamic states as governments seek to formulate legislation compatible with the spirit of Islam and the 21st century. [UNC] Part IV: Paradise Lies at the Feet of the Mother: First describes the ideal role of the Muslim woman and then explores issues of marriage, divorce, veiling, and gender roles in Egypt, Nigeria and Indonesia. [UNC] Part V: Among the Non-Believers: Examines the challenge to the 40% of Muslims who live in countries where they are a religious minority. Situations in India differ from those in Britain or in Central Asia. Addresses questions including whether Muslims suffer particular discrimination and whether conflict exists for them between loyalties to the global community of Islam and to one's own nation. [UNC] Part VI: The Last Crusade: The West sees Islam too often as a religion of terrorism and with no distinction between fundamentalism and activism. Yet from the Muslim point of view, it is the West that threatens and suppresses. This film concludes with the question of who is under attack and why. Visits Jerusalem, Cairo, Kadvna and Tehran. [UNC] THE LIVING MARTYR: INSIDE THE HEZBOLLAH: MARRIAGE, EGYPTIAN STYLE: MEASURES OF DISTANCE: MECCA, THE FORBIDDEN CITY: MEMOIRES D'IMMIGRES: MIDDLE EAST I 1900-1956: From the End of the Ottoman Empire to the Suez Crisis : 60 min., 2", Color, U,G. French-made documentary tracing the international politics of the eastern Arab world, Turkey, and Iran. Emphasizes French role alongside Britain, and seldom portrays aspirations of the peoples of the region except through an Anglo-French optic. Excellent historical footage of major figures and events since the start of 20th century, but clips and narrative are too fast and disjointed for an uninformed viewer to follow easily. Several minor but confusing mistranslations of French commentary into English. [TM] Directed by Alain Ferrari. Historical adviser: Dominique Chevallier. MIDDLE EAST II 1956-1991: From the Suez Crisis to the Gulf War : 60 min., 2", Color, U,G. The second half of this documentary continues in a similar vein, tracing events from Egypt to Afghanistan (including those of the PLO and the Palestinian people) in a chronological, newsreel style. Useful if students already have significant background knowledge. [AGF] Directed by Alain Ferrari. Historical advisor: Dominique Chevallier. MINE EYES HAVE SEEN THE GLORY: EVANGELICALISM IN AMERICA *Study guide available with video. 1992, 55 min. each, 2", Color, H,U. There are between 50 and 80 million Evangelicals in America. The movement claims to be anchored in a 2,000-year-old tradition of orthodox Christianity. Yet in the U.S., Evangelicalism has many different faces and has shown an incredible capacity to diversify and adapt to changing needs and cultural conditions. Hosted by Randall Balmer, Tremaine Associate Professor of Religion at Columbia University, this three-part PBS series examines Evangelicalism at the grass roots level, uncovering its joys and concerns, its strengths and struggles, its basic motivations and visions of life. The series is based on Balmer's book of the same name. Produced by Gateway Films/Vision Video. MIRROR OF KINGS: TALES FROM KALILA WA DIMNA: ca. 1970s, 12 min., 2", Color, M,H. An adaptation of the traditional fables from India and Arabia designed to teach morals and princely behavior to rulers through stories enacted by animals. The animated film narrated by Omar Sharif is based on a 14th Century Mamluk manuscript and its delightful illustrations. [CNES] Smithsonian Institution. MONGOL HORDES: STORM FROM THE EAST: 1993, 45 min. each, 2", Color, H,U,G. Though generally very useful presentations, these titles suffer from one major flaw that should be addressed during classroom discussion. The narration implies that despite their technological advances, religious tolerance, and excellent administration, they were nonetheless "barbarians." Encouraging students to recognize this contradictory information may lead to a richer understanding of the Mongols, and of some of our more problematic assumptions about world history. [PM] Directed by Robert Marshall & Viviana Woodruff for NHK & BBC. Part I: Birth of a Empire : Part I of this made-for-television documentary begins with a look at modern Mongolia as it emerges from Soviet tutelage. A brief survey of Chingiz Khan's significance as a hero in popular Mongolian consciousness leads into discussion of the origins of his vast empire. The audience follows Chingiz Khan's conquests from Mongolia to Central Asia, Russia and China. The film explores the socioeconomic organization of the Mongols on the eve of Chingiz Khan's birth, his struggle for supremacy, unification of the Mongol tribes under his rule, and the rise of an empire through expansion into China and the territory of the Khwarazm Shah. [PM] Part II: World Conquerors : This installment encompasses two central themes: medieval Europe's view of the Mongols and the Mongol impact on central Muslim lands. Exemplified by the Crusades, the struggle between the Christian West and the Muslim world links these two foci and explains that European Christians initially conceived of the Mongols as co-religionists and allies because they too fought against the Muslims. Defeats in Poland and Hungary quickly convinced the West that one's enemy's enemy is not always one's friend. Explorations of medieval myths about the Mongols and how they changed over time offer food for discussion. The rest of the episode addresses the establishment of the Ilkhanate in the territory of modern-day Iran, the destruction of the Assassins, and the Mamluk victory at Ain Jalut. [PM] Part IV: The Last Khan of Khans: A description is not available MOROCCO: THE PAST AND PRESENT OF DJEMMA EL FNA: 1995, 18 min., 2", Color, M,H,U,G. Marrakech's famous square, a historic crossroad of Arab and Berber cultures, has for years stirred the imagination of Westerners. This documentary captures the color, romance, and spiritual atmosphere that once drew the likes of Edith Wharton, Eleanor Roosevelt, and Winston Churchill. Montgomery shares what tourists see and experience when they come to the square C storytellers, musicians, acrobats, and snake charmers from across the region C and interviews performers about their tradition. The video provides many clever contrasts: for instance, a Moroccan guide discusses the square's history as a destination for caravans from the Sahara and its role as a center for the dissemination of ideas, while a local resident complains about the effects of tourism on the town's young people. [AGF] Directed by Stephen Montgomery. THE MOTHER OF LIGHT AND HER DAUGHTERS: THE MOUNTAIN [Al-Jabal]: MUHAMMAD, LEGACY OF A PROPHET: MUHSIN BEY: NASSER 56: 1996, 140 min., 2", Color. A description of this film is not yet available. THE NEED: 1991, 81 min., 2", Color, Farsi dialogue w/English subtitles. A description of this film is not yet available. NEW FRONTIERS: THE MIDDLE EAST FOLLOWING WWI (The Middle East series): *Study guide available with video. 1985, 25 min., 2", Color, Arabic w/English subtitles, H,U U. Perhaps the most useful installment of this 14-part series, this video focuses on one of the major historical sources of Middle East tension: the redrawing of the region's map following the World War I. The 19th century colonial encroachment in North Africa and the dissolution of the Ottoman Empire become intelligible to all, supported by adroit use of film clips and photographs, as well as superior graphics. Explanation of the millet system and of religious as distinguished from territorial identity under the Ottoman Empire clarify the struggle to redefine identity in national terms within the new states emerging from Mandate status into independence. A few, small errors: Kurdistan bridges four rather than three countries, with northern Syria overlooked; nor does Kurdistan extend all the way to the Arabian Gulf. For the most part, though, New Frontiers is a brilliant film carrying out the promise of offering "understanding beyond the headlines." [EFB] Directed by Boiteau & Stansfield for TV Ontario and Mideast Productions. Narrated by Richard Bulliet. NIGHT OF THE JACKAL: 1989, 105 min., 2", Color, Arabic with English subtitles, U,G. The film is set in the Syrian countryside just prior to the 1956 invasion of Egypt and follows the decline of a peasant farmer, Abu Kamel, as his vanity destroys his life and the lives of his family. Too caught up in his own concerns, he fails to notice the individual problems of the rest of his family as one by one they pass beyond the point where their honor and in some cases, their lives, can be saved. Within the framework of Syria's rich culture, Abdulhamid cuts to the heart of the human struggle shared by us all. Directed by Abdulatif Abdulhamid. NOT WITHOUT MY VEIL: WOMEN IN OMAN: 1993, 30 min., 2", Color, M,H,U. The film opens with the conventional question of whether Islam is a challenge to the West or whether Muslims long to mirror Western life, employing the kind of exotic imagery whose stereotypes it will later try to dispel. It includes interviews with women of several ages and backgrounds (Bedouin woman, married and unmarried women, a bank president), who address issues of lifestyle, domestic situation, marriage and education, and ideals of beauty and self identity. The film benefits from the focus on various environments: at work and at home, in the city, the village and the desert. But although it includes quotes from the Qur'an, it does not address the personal relationship between religion and veiling, which is a factor for some women who wear hijab. And there are few scenes of men and women interacting, which is more a part of daily life than the film would have us believe. [AGF] Produced by Mia Grondahl. ODYSSEY: DADI'S FAMILY: 1981, 60 min., 3/4", Color, M,H,U. A portrait of a woman's life, aspirations, and constraints she experiences as a member of a Hindu family in a rural, agricultural setting in northwest India. THE OIL KINGDOM SERIES: 1984, 60 min. each, 2", 3/4", Color, H,U. This series on Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates and Oman is hosted by journalist Jo Franklin-Trout using on-site interviews. Her goal is to demythologize this area for Americans, offering insight into contemporary social life as well as politics and plans for the future. But there is confusion, at times, about exactly where she is! [UNC] Produced by PBS/Pacific. Part I: Kings and Pirates: The historical background of "commerce, colonialism and culture" of the Gulf States -- from Portuguese conquest through British hegemony --leads to discussion of the discovery of oil and the impact of the petrodollars on the modernization process. [UNC] Part II: The Petrodollar Coast: Franklin-Trout visits Oman, a nation described as "medieval" in 1970, but now miraculously modernized. Interviews in the United Arab Emirates address the role of women and issues concerning foreign workers. [UNC] Part III: A Sea of Conflict: This video documents the volatility of the smaller Arab Gulf States, their vulnerability as international pawns, and their sensitivity to local Arab religious and political pressures. [UNC]. ON BOYS, GIRLS AND THE VEIL: 1995, 73 min., 2", Color, Arabic w/English subtitles, H,U,G. This beautifully filmed piece examines veiling in the context of Egyptian society, rather than as an isolated religious phenomenon, as so many films have. Focusing on Bassem, a teacher and aspiring actor; and his family, neighbors and friends, this film unfolds a gentle narrative on the social and cultural factors that contribute to women's decisions to veil. Through Bassem, we see social interaction between young men and women uninhibited by hijab; and watch his veiled friends engage in animated discussions over whether veiling protects them from harassment; whether it is an obligation; and whether it signals their virtue or their religious beliefs. Throughout we get a sense of the secular (and less so, religious) dimensions of their decisions: how peer pressure, male-female relations, and societal expectations play determining roles. [AGF] Directed by Yousry Nasrallah. ON THE EDGE OF PEACE: 1994, 104 min., 2", Color, Arabic, Hebrew w/English subtitles, U,G. Video cameras were given to Israelis and Palestinians so that they could document aspects of their daily lives in Israel and the Occupied Territories during the transitional period from the signing of the September, 1993 Oslo Accords to the beginnings of Palestinian self-rule in May 1994. Diarists filmed during a period including the massacre of Arabs at Hebron; the bombing of an Israeli bus at Afula; the release and return of Palestinian prisoners; and the beginning of self-rule in Jericho. The diarists are an older Israeli whose son was killed during the invasion of Lebanon; a West Jerusalem high school senior on the verge of entering the army; an Israeli girls' school teacher living in a West Bank settlement; three Palestinian boys involved in the Fatah youth movement; a family whose Jericho home was destroyed and son jailed after he joined the intifada; and a family in a West Bank refugee camp that has lost several male members through deportation and dispersal. [AGF] Directed by Ilan Ziv. Produced by Daoud Kuttab, Amit Breuer and Ziv. ORIGINS AND EVIDENCE (Crossroads of Civilization series): 1978, 58 min., 2", Color, M,H,U. Exploring a crucial stage in the evolution of civilization, this program profiles Cyrus and Darius, and examines the role of each in the development of the Persian empire. While piecing together this story, the film illustrates why the Iranian plateau became crucial in geographical, political and historical terms. Narrated by David Frost. THE OTHER HALF OF ALLAH'S SKY: Part I: 1880 - 1950 1993, 60 min., 2", Color, H,U,G. Beginning with the earliest mass migration of European Jews to Palestine, this video guides viewers through the persecution of European Jews and development of the Zionist ideal, the early view of Palestine as "a land without people for a people without land", and post-WW II events leading to the founding of Israel. Explores with a critical eye the gradual displacement of the native population, their disadvantageous position in world politics, and illustrates how resistance to colonialism (beginning with the British mandate) was at the root of Arab resistance to a Jewish state. Valuable especially for 19th century photographs of Palestine and early footage shot by the Lumières and by a local Jewish filmmaker that reveal much about the way in which Palestine was viewed on the world stage and by Jewish immigrants. [AGF] Directed by Simone Bitton. PALESTINE: STORY OF A LAND: Part II: 1950- 1991 1993, 60 min., 2", Color, H,U,G. Covering the period from the founding of Israel to the Madrid peace conference, the second installment introduces key figures - Arafat, Begin, Nasser, Rabin, Sadat, Shamir, and others - and traces their roles and the evolution of conflict between the Israelis, Palestinians and neighboring Arab countries. Close attention paid to Israeli government, Arab countries, and PLO stances over time grounds events in a political and historical context, and illustrates the range of attitudes among leaders. Video deals with terrorist acts, political strategies, and peace offers as they were acted out by Israelis and Palestinians. Note: Brief footage of bombings and torture are quite graphic. [AGF] Directed by Simone Bitton. PALESTINIAN COSTUMES AND EMBROIDERY, A PRECIOUS LEGACY: 1990, 35 min., 2", Color, M,H,U. An updated and condensed version of the original (below) that provides more useful narration on when and how everyday and ceremonial clothing was worn, traces where patterns originated, and examines the cross-pollination of styles between Europe and the Middle East. Showcases late nineteenth and early twentieth century bridal and everyday wear in characteristic patterns and materials from five regions: Jerusalem, Bethlehem, Ramallah, Hebron, Jaffa, Northern Palestine/Syria, Majdal (coastal area), and Gaza and the southern deserts. An excellent overview with a fine eye for detail. [AGF] Produced by Farah & Hanan Munayyer. PALESTINIAN NATIONAL COSTUMES: PRESERVING THE LEGACY: 1980s, 70 min., 2", Color, M,H,U. A presentation of a unique collection of traditional Palestinian bridal and ceremonial costumes of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, modeled to the beat of Arabic music. The film includes over 30 complete costumes from all parts of Palestine. The first half, featuring models, is useful for seeing how the dresses and headdresses were worn together and the distinctive styles of each region; while the second half includes close-ups of various stitches, patterns and accessories. Useful, if spare narration on the characteristics and history of the clothing and jewelry. [AGF] PALMS AND POMEGRANATES: TRADITIONAL DRESS OF SAUDI ARABIA: 1987, 12 min., 2", Color, M. A marginally useful promotional piece, this video focuses only briefly on the clothing mentioned in the title. After an encyclopedia-like overview of Saudi Arabia's topography, geography, major cities and industries, the video stresses preservation efforts as applied to archaeological sites, wildlife, folk arts, dance, music, desert sports and traditional clothing. [AGF] Produced and directed by Christopher C. Hayes for the U.S. Committee for Saudi Arabian Cultural Heritage. THE PEDDLER: 1986, 95 min., 2", Color, Farsi dialogue w/English subtitles. A description of this film is not yet available. PEOPLES OF ISLAM: 1982, 24 min., 2", Color, H,U. This film complements The Gift of Islam with its discussion of the ways of life and societies of Muslims throughout the Middle East. Assuming some familiarity with the basic tenets of Islam, it focuses on the task of "fusing a new way of life with an enduring heritage." Shown are Muslims in Nigeria, Morocco, Egypt, Malaysia and Indonesia, representing tolerance of diversity and adaptability to change, together with the universality of the teachings of Islam. The multiformity of practices superimposed on the unity of belief is well documented in vignettes sampling the geographic panorama of the Islamic world: a Yoruba Qur'anic lesson in Lagos; a fete for a returning hajji in West Java, etc. Women's roles are subtly interwoven. This advocatory film does concentrate mainly on urban areas, and does not take up questions posed in the wake of Iran's experience; however, its value lies in its introduction of Muslims and the practice of Islam in a contemporary world. [EFB] Written and directed by Stuart Day. THE PRAYERS OF THE WARLORD PRICE OF CHANGE (Reformers and Revolutionaries series): Q - Z THE PUPPETEER [Al-Aragouz]: 1989, 117 mins. (two parts; one tape), 2", Color, U,G.This film addresses the dilemma confronting a new generation: honor versus opportunism. Egypt's dilemma is mirrored in this tale of the fool who wisely serves the cause of justice, and a son consumed by greed. Bahloul, the son of an idealistic puppeteer who tells him tales of Aragouz, a character in traditional puppet shows who stands against injustice; grows into a different sort of man than his father. He leaves his village for Cairo University and discovers a new world where a clever young man can grab a good life. Bahloul returns home rich, ruthless and willing to exploit the residents of his village for financial gain. Ultimately, Aragouz will step forward to challenge this new-generation opportunist. Though the film is a fine and timely work about choices in the lives of nations and individuals, viewers should keep in mind that it contains a studio executive's vision of the countryside. Stars Omar Sharif as the impoverished puppeteer. [KVJ] Directed by Hani Lachine. THE RAMAYAN: 1980s, 60 min. each, 2", Color, Hindi w/English subtitles, M,H,U,G. Parts 1, 2, 25, 26. This video in 26 parts dramatizes the famous Indian epic of the trials of the king Rama and his beloved wife, Sita. Robbed of his heirship to the throne of Ayodhya, Rama is banished to the forest accompanied by his brother Laksmana and Sita. Rama continually undergoes hardships to test his virtue and righteousness according to the Hindu ideal of dharma. His final task is rescuing Sita from the demon king Ravana, who has hidden her in his castle in faraway Lanka. Aided by an army of monkeys, Rama rescues Sita and destroys Ravana. He returns to Ayodhya victorious and assumes his rightful place as king with his queen. This dramatization gained wide popularity when it was serialized on Indian television, bringing daily activity to a virtual standstill. Parts 1, 2, 25 and 26 represent the beginning and end of this epic saga. [KGZ] Directed and produced by Ramanand Sagar. AL-RISALAH (THE MESSAGE): 1991, Part I: 96 min.; Part II: 76 min., 2", Color In Arabic, U,G. This Arabic language version of The Message is a portrait of the early days of Muhammad's message. As in the English language version, the Prophet is not shown. Early Mecca and Medina are depicted imaginatively: the idols in and around the Ka'ba are surrounded by mountainous deserts along with the flourishing plantations of Yathrib, which later became Medina, the city of the Prophet. The film tells a more detailed story than the English version, and is aimed at an audience familiar with Muhammad's early life and the early life of Islam. It concentrates on military history, vividly showing the major battles of Badr, Uhud, and the final victory in Mecca. It does not convey a cultural understanding of the early Islamic milieu, focusing more on the social and political injustices of pre-Islamic Arabia. Arabic spoken in the film is excellent; the movie is strongly recommended for students of the language because of its use of Qur'anic Arabic in daily speech. [CNES] Directed by Moustapha Akkad. RIVERS OF FIRE: 1990, 40 min., 2", Color, H,U,G. This video is a competent presentation highlighting the volatile Middle East conflict over the natural resource more valuable than oil: water. The film examines dilemmas within countries as well as between them: Turkey's newest dam system can control waters from the Tigris and Euphrates rivers flowing to Syria and Iraq, which lack adequate storage facilities for the reservoir-filling process; Jordan is a "fresh-water pauper" already surviving on aqueous overdraft, though a Syrian-Jordanian project for water storage threatens Israel; and Israel's interest in the Golan Heights is as much related to control of the headwaters of the Jordan River as to fear of military strikes. With excellent maps, careful statistics, blunt interviews with politicians, commentaries from concerned citizens and good photographic coverage of the various areas. [EFB] Directed by Paul Woolrich and produced by Marshall Healey for Channel 4/BBC. THE ROAD TO WAR IN THE PERSIAN GULF: 1992, 24 min., 2", Color, H,U. This documentary begins with the period just after World War I, when Britain and France divided the Middle East between themselves. The film discusses how the oil resources of Iraq and Kuwait have shaped their history, and traces U.S. involvement in the region, beginning with the Iran-Iraq war and ending with the U.S. led offensive against Iraq that began on January 17th, 1991. The video features interviews with two experts on the Middle East with sharply different views: C. Max Kortepeter of New York University and Peter A. Rodman of Johns Hopkins University. It includes archival footage from ABC News and Independent Television, as well as video footage shot in Iraqi cities during and after the allied bombing. [CNES] Directed and produced by Frank Beck for American School Publishers. RUNAWAY: THE RUNNER: 1982, 60 min. each, 2", 3/4", Color, H,U. A trilogy of hour-long TV specials produced by anchorwoman Jo Franklin-Trout lapses into the very stereotypes it boasts of debunking: showing desert and no fertile land, using an incorrect definition of jihad, and relying on the exotic and primitive to describe life. [UNC] Directed by Jo Franklin-Trout. Produced by PBS. Part I: The Kingdom provides excellent photography with plenty of hype. A reasonably accurate historical overview uses old film clips well in an aloof but not unsympathetic fashion, but Islam is relegated to the background rather than recognized as playing an essential role. [UNC] Part II: The Race With Time focuses on the extraordinary tempo of modernization and the problems arising from it. A series of interviews provide discussion of reactions and attitudes towards these changes, although the role of the family and the individual within the family is not sufficiently explored. [UNC] Part III: Oil, Money and Politics intends to deal with Saudi Arabia's position as an emerging world power, but concentrates primarily on Saudi-American relationships, rather than placing the country's position in a global context. The film avoids grappling with issues in depth, particularly that of Islam. The series of lengthy interviews contain some factual errors but overall, provide an accurate picture of Saudi importance and involvement in the world of the 1980s. [UNC] SAUDI ARABIA TODAY: 1981, 29 min., 16 mm, Color, H,U. This survey of rapid change in Saudi Arabia emphasizes twin themes of economic and social development in the context of preserving traditional culture and values. Low-keyed, accurate, in general sympathetic but not propagandistic, the film has two weaknesses: a lack of scenes of human relationships -- family life, daily activities -- and accented narration that may be difficult for some ears to understand. [UNC] Produced by Exxon. SAUDI ARCHITECTURAL HERITAGE: A TREASURE TO REDISCOVER: 1970's, 18 min., 2", Color, U,G. This well-organized presentation on Saudi architecture uses slides with diagrams superimposed. Four geographical regions are defined. Each of the regions is shown to have one model predominate: in the north, the patio; in the south, the Yemeni tower; in the east, Mesopotamian structures; in the west, the Turko-Egyptian balconies. Only in the center Nejd area is the architecture completely autonomous. The color of the slides is not always the best; the musical soundtrack should be studiously ignored. The information, however, on architectural analysis and interpretations of use of space and light is valuable and flexible for classroom usage. The geographical diversity of the Arabian peninsula is also well demonstrated. [CNES] Directed by Ziad Ahmed Zaidan for the Idea Center. THE SECRETS OF THE DEAD SEA SCROLLS: 1991, 60 min., 2", Color, H,U,G. This thorough program examines the politics and scholarly history of the discovery, collection, and ensuing publication of the seven Dead Sea Scrolls first unearthed in 1946 in the caves of Qumran. Contains a detailed look at the contents of the texts along with the complicated -- and controversial -- history of who has controlled their translation and publication. Incorporates interviews with major scholars (including Hebrew & Judaic Studies Professor Lawrence Schiffman of NYU) and figures of the editing team, and presents early and revised theories on the authors of the texts, including archaeological evidence regarding the Essenes, who were originally believed to have written the texts. A fairly scholarly introduction. [AGF] A Nova program produced for PBS by the WGBH Science Unit. THE SILENCES OF THE PALACE: 1996, 127 min., 2", Color. A description of this film is not yet available. THE SILK ROAD: SINAN: UNTIL ETERNITY: SIR ALFRED OF CHARLES DE GAULLE AIRPORT: SONG OF UMM DALAILA: THE STORY OF THE SAHRAWIS: THE STAKES OF ISLAM: THE PERILOUS VALLEY OF CENTRAL ASIA: 52 min. A description of this film is not available. A STATE OF DANGER: THE STRUGGLE FOR PEACE: ISRAELIS AND PALESTINIANS: 1991, 57 min., 2", Color, H,U,G. Filmed by a crew made up of Israelis, Palestinians and Americans, this video examines the efforts of several grassroots organizations C Israeli and Palestinian C in bringing about a peaceful settlement in the region, especially since the intifada began in 1987. This film is particularly valuable for its history of the intifada as related by its participants, including the essential, non-violent dimensions that led to merchants refusing to pay taxes, and those who sought economic independence by starting agricultural cooperatives and backyard farming. Includes footage of meetings between an Israeli-Palestinian group before and after the Gulf War; and introduces Women in Black and an organization of Israeli soldiers who refuse to serve in the Occupied Territories. [AGF] Directed by Steven Talley. Produced by Elizabeth Fernea. SÜLEYMAN THE MAGNIFICENT: 1987, 57 min., 2", Color, H,U,G. Serious scholarship is popularized, but never trivialized in this companion video to the exhibition of the same name shown at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. In the 16th century, the brilliant and powerful Sultan Süleyman became the first Ottoman emperor to assert himself in European politics. His learned and elegant Islamic court in Constantinople spread its art and laws across three continents. Much of that art was in the form of manuscript illumination, intricately painted pages of the life and military campaigns of Süleyman. In a subtle way, the film reveals a continuity between Süleyman's culture and that of present-day Istanbul. [The New York Times] Directed by Suzanne Sauman for the Metropolitan Museum and the National Gallery of Art. SUSPENDED DREAMS: DEVELOPING STORIES I: ENVIRONMENT & DEVELOPMENT: 1992, 49 min., 2", Color Arabic w/English subtitles, U,G. This video opens with two men talking across a Beirut street where they used to exchange gunfire. Extraordinary moments like these characterize the documentary, which focuses on the two friends -- a Muslim and a Christian -- along with a woman inspired to activism by her husband's death in the war, and an actor. By exploring their lives and life histories, the video examines the effects of 16 years of civil war on the physical mental, and cultural environments of a once-vibrant city, and efforts of reconstruction. Beautiful soundtrack with music by Jihad Racy, Simon Shaheen, and others. This is a fine film, but not an introductory one; it is recommended for classes that have some knowledge of the history of the Lebanese civil war and the ongoing conflict with Israel. [AGF] Directed by Mai Masri and Jean Chamoun. A SUSPENDED LIFE: TALES FROM ARAB DETROIT: TALES FROM A BOOK OF KINGS: 1973, 26 min., 2", Color, H,U,G. Tales from (Firdowsi's) Shahnameh, the mythic epic of Iran, are recounted by examining pages from the Houghton collection, considered the finest example of all the Persian book-of-kings manuscripts. Close-ups of the brilliant miniatures illustrating the Shahnameh focus on details of flowers, animals, and crafts as well as the timeless stories of princes and princesses, evil and good. Though the photography is fine and musical support well chosen -- musical instruments in the miniatures are at times coordinated with music of the soundtrack -- the film gives fairly brief historical and political context for the epic and its creation. Students could profit by some background preparation in the art and techniques of miniature painting and historical outlines of the period and characters illustrated in the Shahnameh. [AGF] Produced for the Metropolitan Museum of Art. TESTIMONIES: 1993, 56 min., 2", Color, Hebrew w/English subtitles, U,G. This grim and disturbing film deals with the role and reactions of male Israeli soldiers serving in the Occupied Territories during the intifada. Interviews Israeli soldiers who helped crush the intifada using various forms of violence, focusing less on what was done to Palestinians than on how those who committed such acts felt about what they did. A major issue in the film is how some soldiers reacted to an unofficial policy of breaking arms and legs to halt stone-throwing by Palestinians. Included are scenes of soldiers using clubs and rocks to break Palestinians' limbs, and later discussing how they felt about their actions. Video has since been used in Israeli army training to encourage discussions about when it is morally imperative to question orders. Note: Contains several brutal and graphic scenes; should not be screened without discussion. [AGF] Directed by Ido Selea. THIS IS NOT BEIRUT: A description of this is film is not yet available. TOPKAPI PALACE: Twenty-four of the thirty-six sultans of the Ottoman Dynasty ruled the empire from the Topkapi Palace in Istanbul for a period of 400 years. The royal residence became a museum after the founding of the Turkish Republic in 1923, and opened its doors to a film crew for the first time 1990. This seven-part series explores the treasures and history of the palace. Directed by Suha Arin for MTV-Istanbul. Part I: General Outlines: 1991, 25 min., 2", Color, M,H,U. Offers viewers general information about the history, customs, and ceremonies of the palace; parts of the buildings and their functions; and additions commissioned by some of the Sultans who ascended the throne. Part V: The Sacred Relics: 1991, 21 min., 2", Color, M,H,U. Focuses on a collection of sacred objects set up by Yazuz Sultan Selim in the first half of the 16th century, which is now considered one of the world's richest collections of sacred relics in terms of quantity, quality and state preservation. Among the items are the robe of the Prophet Mohammed, a letter written by him on antelope skin, one of his teeth, and locks of his beard. Also included are the gold and silver keys of the Kaaba at Mecca. Part VI: The Treasury: 1991 , 22 min., 2", Color, M,H,U. Describes the three treasuries and their functions within the Ottoman state, and acquaints viewers with examples of gold, silver and copper coinage of the Ottoman period. Includes a detailed view of many priceless items exhibited in the royal treasury, such as thrones encrusted with precious stones, swords, the famous "Topkapi Dagger" with its three enormous emeralds, and the 86-carat "Spoonmaker's Diamond." TORCHBEARERS: BRIDGING THE DARK AGES (The Middle East series): 1985, 25 min., 2", Color, M,H,U. Addresses the flourishing of Islamic civilization, which was quite knowledgeable in sciences, humanities and art while Europe wallowed in isolation. Shows how Islamic culture absorbed, then synthesized the intellectual heritage of the Jews, Romans, Greeks, Persians, Indians and Chinese, transmuting all into a culture that would later be taken over by Europe as a basis for its Renaissance. Some sweeping generalizations may give pause (Were early Muslims really "simple Bedouins from the desert?" Did European scholars really flock to Baghdad, Damascus and Cairo, where resources were all neatly transcribed into Arabic?) But much is useful, and the unique Arab dimension is never lost in sequences representing the Islamic heritage to the West: architecture, math astronomy, alchemy, chess, and the like. [EFB] Directed by Denise Boitteau & David Stansfield. Narrated by Richard Bulliet. TORN LIVING: 1993, 22 min., 2", Color, U,G. This amalgamation of Palestinian women's narratives personalizes the experiences of those who were forced to leave Palestine when it became Israel in 1948. The Palestinian female narrator (the director) becomes the portrayed in the film, which is a series of personal reflections on the experience of being in exile, beginning with a forced and hasty departure from home at a very young age. Using UNRWA photographs and footage shot by Palestinians, paintings, and poetry, the narrator tells the story of "the Palestinian woman" who grew up in a refugee camp In Lebanon, married at a young age, was left alone for a few years when her husband emigrated to the U.S., and then settled there with her husband as the rest of the family dispersed elsewhere around the globe. Highly personal while describing a people's universal experience. [AGF] Directed by Alia Arasoughly. TURKISH TRADITIONAL ART TODAY: 1991, 42 min., 2", Color, M,H,U,G. From the urban bustle of Istanbul to the mountain village of Ahmetler, the filmmakers take us on a vivid tour of streets, shops, countrysides, and marketplaces where a variety of Turkish products are created and sold. Throughout, the audience is made aware of the sights (flowers, produce, vegetables and fruit, mosques, minarets), sounds (music, call to prayer five times daily) and daily activities (men gathered for tea, people washing at public fountains before prayer) that surround and influence the craftsmen. The video is narrated only by daytime sounds and occasional music; brief or no translations are provided for the few interviews that occur. Rather, the focus is on the craftsmen themselves: potters at the wheel and painters decorating the fired plates and urns; young boys weaving blankets; women at the loom; the calligrapher writing; blacksmiths shaping a red-hot piece or iron into a scythe; and so on, with a sharp eye for detail. Practical and decorative uses are illustrated: we later watch villagers using scythes to harvest hay. Students will learn from this at a variety of levels, though younger viewers may balk at the lack of narrative. Those learning Turkish will appreciate the untranslated dialogue spoken by people from different regions of the country. [AGF] Directed by Henry Glassie & Tom McCarthy for the Museum of International Folk Art, Museum of New Mexico. THE UNPROMISED LAND [ha-Eretz ha-Lo Movtahat]: 1992, 48 min., 2", Color, Hebrew w/English subtitles, H,U,G. In 1912, a group of Yemeni Jews followed their spiritual leader to the Sea of Galilee, where they cultivated the land. In 1914, the land was given to a group of Ashkenazi pioneers, now celebrated as the founders of Kibbutz Kinneret. Challenging the official Euro-Israeli narrative, this film gives voice to the Yemenis and their descendants, who mourn their loss and confront those who have erased their presence from history. [LA] Directed by Ayelet Heller. UP TO THE SOUTH: 1993, 60 min., 2", Color, Arabic w/English subtitles, U,G. This documentary examines consequences of and forms of resistance to the Israeli occupation of southern Lebanon as well as how such issues are (mis)represented in the West. The film is a close examination of ideas and figures that have become tied to the region: terrorism, colonialism, occupation, resistance, collaboration and experts/leaders. Subjects interviewed -- including residents and members of formal resistance movements -- discuss the relationship between economic and social issues: the relationship between occupier and occupied, how and whether to resist, and their feelings about the land. Intertwined in the documentary is a self-consciousness of how even this "product" (film) is manufactured in terms of the authors' own representations. [AGF] Directed by Jayce Salloum & Walid Ra'ad. THE VEIL AND THE REPUBLIC (Women of Islam series): 1995, 52 min., 2", Color, Some Arabic w/French subtitles , H,U,G. This video presents problems young Muslim women face in adapting to French society, addressing religious, cultural and social issues. Examines too how they negotiate between the expectations of parents, Muslim and non-Muslim schoolmates and friends, and society in general. Directed by Yamina Benguigi. A VEILED REVOLUTION (Reformers and Revolutionaries series): *Study guide available with video. 1982, 26 min., 2", Color, Some Arabic w/Eng. subtitles, H,U,G. This video is an excellent vehicle to help Western audiences see beyond stereotyped notions about women and veiling in the Middle East, and is especially useful in light of recent developments in Egypt. The film interviews Egyptian women who have chosen and not chosen "lawful dress," and illustrates different interpretations and types of covering among women who wear it. Film examines both the realities and misperceptions of this tradition, correctly describing it as a newer, adapted mode of dressing, rather than "a return to the veil." Women interviewed come from many walks of life -- some in the workplace, some not -- and include others who don't wear the veil. Fernea again provides a useful study guide with good background information for the instructor. [AGF] Directed by Marilyn Gaunt. Produced by Elizabeth Fernea. WATER WARS: STRUGGLE IN THE HOLY LAND, PART OF A THREE PART SERIES: 1998, 26 min., 2", Color. A description of this film is not yet available. WEST BEIRUT: WHERE IS THE FRIENDS HOME: 1989, 90 min., 2", Color, Farsi dialogue w/English subtitles. This is the first film of the trilogy by the master of Iranian cinema, Abbas Kiarostami ( the other two are called, "Life and Nothing More" and "Through the Olive Trees" ). Set in a village near Koker, this film is a story of Ahmad's epic quest - a boy at the threshold of adolescence who is about to bid farewell to innocent childhood and to discover that life is full of unanswered questions. The opening scene unfolds the tragic cause of Ahmad's quest : the teacher scolds Ahmad's classmate Nematzadeh, because ha has done his homework again on a sheet of paper instead of in his notebook; it is a matter of discipline, if it happens again, the teacher will dismisss Nematzadeh from school. Going back home, Ahmad finds Nematzadeh's notebook in his own bag. He starts desparately to look for the friend's home, out of breath along the zigzag road, and this search itself becomes a metaphor for life. Just as describes in a poem addressed to a boy written by an Iranian poet Sohrab Sepehri, which has inspired Kiarostami to shoot this film, Ahmad goes "...till the end of that valley leading to adolescence...", and "... stops at the fountain which sprinkles the myths of the earth". Through Kiarostami's masterful, documentary-like photographs and simple but impressive narrative, the film provides a penetrating look at the Iranian countryside and rural social relations, while exploring a universal theme. WHY THE HATE? AMERICA, FROM A MUSLIM POINT OF VIEW: WILD FLOWERS: WOMEN OF SOUTH LEBANON: WITH US OR AGAINST US: Afghans in America: WOMEN LIKE US: WOMEN UNDER SIEGE (Reformers and Revolutionaries series): YOOM ILAK, YOOM ALEIK - JERUSALEM, 1948: [AF] = Ahmed Ferhadi, Professor of Near Eastern Languages and Literature, New York University [AGF] = Alison G. Feldman, Former Associate Director/Outreach Coordinator, Center for Near Eastern Studies, NYU [CEH] = Christine E. Hayes, Professor of Near Eastern Studies, Princeton * [CFA] = Charlotte F. Albright, Outreach Coordinator, Middle East Center, University of Washington [CNES] = Staff and advanced graduate students at the Center for Near Eastern Studies, NYU [EDB] = Elizabeth Davis Barlow, Outreach Coordinator, University of Michigan * [EFB] = Ellen Fairbanks Bodman, filmographer for Middle East Outreach Council & Middle East Studies Association [Images and Echoes] = The World of Islam, Images and Echoes: A Critical Guide to Films and Recordings, ed. Ellen Fairbanks Bodman (American Council of Learned Societies, New York, 1980). [KGZ] = Kenneth G. Zysk, Professor of Religious Studies, NYU [KVJ] = Kathryn V. Johnson, University of North Carolina at Charlotte [LA] = Livia Alexander, curator, 1996 & 1997 Kevorkian Center Film Festivals [MC] = Miriam Cooke, Professor of Asian & African Languages and Literature, Duke University [MI] = Mehrdad Izady, author, The Kurds: A Concise Handbook [MM] = Mary Martin, Outreach Coordinator, Middle East Center, University of Pennsylvania [MG] = Michael Gilsenan, chairman, Department of Middle Eastern Studies; and David B. Kriser Professor of Middle Eastern Studies and Anthropology, NYU [PM] = Paul Michaels, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill [RDM] = Robert D. McChesney, Acting Director, Kevorkian Center, AY 1996-97; Professor of Central Asian & Iranian History, NYU [SY] = Sevine Yegulalp, Turkish Language Instructor, Kevorkian Center, NYU [TM] = Timothy Mitchell, Director, Kevorkian Center, 1998-99; Professor of Politics, NYU [UNC] = Middle East and Islamic World Filmography, ed. Ellen Fairbanks Bodman & Ronald L. Bartholomew, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 1992. [ZG] = Zehra Gulbahar, Graduate Assistant, Hagop Kevorkian Center, NYU *Reviews excerpted from the Middle East Studies Association Bulletin. For more information on other available films and video, please contact the Hagop Kevorkian video library. INDEX BY GEOGRAPHY REGIONS, NATIONS & PEOPLES Middle East-General Arabs and the West Camera d'Arabe - The Young Arab Cinema Changing Lives: Women of the Middle East Crusades (4 parts) The Five Pillars of Islam Forces of Change: Women Artists in the Arab World The Gift of Islam The Islamic City Islam: A Pictorial Essay in Four Parts Islamic Science and Technology Introduction to the Arab World Living Islam (6 parts) Middle East: 1900-1956 Middle East: 1956-1991 Mongol Hordes: Storm from the East New Frontiers: The Middle East Following World War II Peoples of Islam Quest for Change: Civil Society in the Middle East Rivers of Fire The Story of Oil: Chief Economic Resource of the Middle East Torchbearers: Bridging the Dark Ages Women and Islam Afghanistan The Kirghiz of Afghanistan Afghanistan: Captives of the Warlords The Prayers of the Warlord Algeria Battle of Algiers Egypt Celebrating the Prophet in the Remembrance of God: Sufi Dhikr in Egypt Changing Lives: Women of the Middle East The Cities of Islam: Cairo Egypt: The Habit of Civilization For Those Who Sail to Heaven The Gods of Our Fathers I Miss the Sun The Killing of Sadat: Why Was Cairo Calm? Marriage, Egyptian Style On Boys, Girls and the Veil Price of Change The Puppeteer A Veiled Revolution Europe The Conquest of Spain The Veil and the Republic (France) India Being Muslim in India I am a Sufi, I am a Muslim Mirror of Kings: Tales from Kalila wa Dimna Odyssey: Dadi's Family The Ramayan (Parts 1,2,25,26) Iran / Persia Between the Lines The Cow Grass: A Nation's Battle for Life Interview with Hashemi Rafsanjani Iran: Past, Present & Future Iranian Journey The Isfahan of Shah Abbas Journal from Tehran Le Lion de Dieu Living Islam: The Challenge of the Past (Part II) Origins and Evidence The Prize: The Quest for Oil (8 parts) The Runner Tales from a Book of Kings Iraq Gulf War: Operation Desert Storm Hidden Wars of Desert Storm Iraq: The Cradle of Civilization Iraq: Sanctions and Suffering Iraq Then and Now: The Unheard Voices of Iraqi Women Lines in the Sand The Prize: The Quest for Oil (8 parts) The Road to War in the Persian Gulf Saddam's Killing Fields Israel Altalena 119 Bullets + Three A Common Ground...Where Three Religions Come Together Golan Heights: Fact and Fiction Gospel Truth Hamsin Jerusalem, the Holy City (4 parts) Jerusalem: Of Heaven & Earth (2 parts) On the Edge of Peace The Secrets of the Dead Sea Scrolls A State of Danger The Struggle for Peace: Israelis and Palestinians Testimonies Up to the South Kurdistan/Kurds Dreaming a Nation: The Kurds Khurasani Kurdish Dances Saddam's Killing Fields Kuwait Gulf War: Operation Desert Storm, The Complete Story Kuwait: A Dream Suspended Lines in the Sand The Prize: Quest for Oil (8 parts) The Road to War in the Persian Gulf Lebanon Beirut to Bosnia: Muslims and the West Chatila Children of Shatila Frontiers of Dreams and Fears The Living Martyr: Inside the Hezbollah Up to the South Suspended Dreams Women Under Siege Libya Lion of the Desert Morocco Ben Barka: The Moroccan Equation Boujad: A Nest in the Heat The Cities of Islam: Fez Embroidered Canticles Morocco: The Past and Present of Djemma el Fna A Door to the Sky Saints and Spirits Ottoman Empire Ayasofia Book of Festivities (Surnameh of Murad III) Lawrence of Arabia Sinan: Until Eternity Süleyman the Magnificent Topkapi Palace I: General Outlines V: The Sacred Relics VI: The Treasury Pakistan I am a Sufi, I am a Muslim Palestine/Palestinians Bethlehem Diary Citizen Bishara Close, Closed, Closure A Dream of Justice and Peace with Hanan Ashrawi The Dupes 500 Dunam on the Moon Hamsin Intezaar Introduction to the End of An Argument The Mountain On the Edge of Peace Palestine: Story of a Land Part I: 1880-1950 Part II: 1950-1993 Palestinian Costumes and Embroidery Palestinian National Costumes The Road to Peace: Israelis and Palestinians A State of Danger Stories of Honor and Shame The Struggle for Peace: Israelis and Palestinians Testimonies Torn Living Women Under Siege Saudi Arabia/Arabian Peninsula [see also: Kuwait] ARAMCO at Fifty Cities of Salt The Gift of Islam Journey of a Lifetime Lawrence of Arabia Living Islam: Foundations Mecca, The Forbidden City Mirror of Kings: Tales from Kalila wa Dimna Not Without My Veil: Women of Oman The Oil Kingdom Series (3 parts) Palms & Pomegranates: Traditional Dress of Saudi Arabia The Prize: The Quest for Oil (8 parts) Al-Risalah Saudi Arabia (3 parts) Saudi Arabia Today Saudi Architectural Heritage The Story of Oil: Chief Economic Resource of the Middle East Syria Golan Heights: Fact and Fiction Night of the Jackal Tunisia The Jews of Djerba Turkey [see also: Ottoman Empire] The Cities of Islam: Istanbul Dances of God The Harem Project: An Islamic Arts Experience The Horse I am a Sufi, I am a Muslim Muhsin Bey Namuslu Souvenirs of Istanbul/Under Turkey's Skies/Türkiye Turkish Traditional Art Today Yol United States Arabs in America But You Speak Such Good English Gulf War: Operation Desert Storm, The Complete Story I Miss the Sun Islam in America Lines in the Sand Painted Bride: Henna Art Among Pakistani Women in NYC The Prize: Quest for Oil (8 parts) The Road to War in the Persian Gulf Tales from Arab Detroit Why the Hate? America, from a Muslim Point of View With us or Against us: Afghans in America INDEX BY SUBJECT RELIGION Buddhism Principles and Practices of Zen Christianity A Common Ground...Where Three Religions Come Together Crusades (4 parts) The Disputation Gospel Truth: Testament-The Bible and History Jerusalem, the Holy City: Jerusalem & the Christian Tradition Mine Eyes Have Seen the Glory: Evangelism in America Hinduism Odyssey: Dadi's Family Islam Arabs and the West Being Muslim in India Celebrating the Prophet in the Remembrance of God: Sufi Dhikr in Egypt Cities of Islam: Cairo Cities of Islam: Fez Cities of Islam: Istanbul A Common Ground...Where Three Religions Come Together Dances of God The Five Pillars of Islam For Those Who Sail to Heaven The Gift of Islam I am a Sufi, I am a Muslim Introduction to the Arab World Islam in America The Islamic City Jerusalem, the Holy City: Jerusalem & the Muslim Tradition Le Lion de Dieu Living Islam: What it Means to be a Muslim in Today's World I: Foundations II: The Challenge of the Past III: Struggling with Modernity IV: Paradise Lies at the Feet of the Mother V: Among the Non-Believers VI: The Last Crusade Mecca, The Forbidden City Muhammad, Legacy of a Prophet Peoples of Islam Saints and Spirits Judaism A Common Ground...Where Three Religions Come Together The Disputation I Miss the Sun Jerusalem, the Holy City: Jerusalem & the Jewish Tradition Jerusalem, Of Heaven and Earth: The Center of the World Jerusalem: Of Heaven & Earth: City of 100 Gates The Jews of Djerba The Secrets of the Dead Sea Scrolls POLITICS & ECONOMICS Revolution/Transformation/Development Altalena Arabs and the West 119 Bullets + Three Dreaming a Nation: The Kurds Interview with Hashemi Rafsanjani Journal from Tehran The Killing of Sadat: Why Was Cairo Calm? Saddam's Killing Fields Saudi Arabia Today Immigration/Diaspora Arabs in America I Miss the Sun Living in Paradise Memoires d'Immigres Painted Bride: Henna Art Among Pakistani Women in NYC Tales from Arab Detroit The Veil and the Republic Natural Resources ARAMCO at Fifty Cities of Salt The Oil Kingdom Series: I. Kings and Pirates II. The Petrodollar Coast III. A Sea of Conflict The Prize: Quest for Oil (8 parts) Rivers of Fire Saudi Arabia: Oil, Money and Politics The Story of Oil: Chief Economic Resource of the Middle East HISTORY Cities of Islam: Cairo Cities of Islam: Fez Cities of Islam: Istanbul The Conquest of Spain Crusades (4 parts) Dreaming a Nation: The Kurds Egypt: The Habit of Civilization The Gods of our Fathers Grass: A Nation's Battle for Life Introduction to the Arab World Iran: Past, Present, Future Iraq: Cradle of Civilization The Islamic City Jerusalem, the Holy City: A Collage of Sacred and Secular History The Kirghiz of Afghanistan Kuwait: A Dream Suspended Living Islam II: The Challenge of the Past Middle East 1900-1956: From the End of the Empire to the Suez Crisis Middle East 1956-1991: From the Suez Crisis to the Gulf War Mongol Hordes: Storm from the East I. Birth of a Nation III. Tartar Crusaders Morocco: The Past and Present of Djemma el Fna New Frontiers: The Middle East Following WWI Origins and Evidence Palestine: Story of a Land Part I: 1880-1950 Part II: 1950-1993 The Road to War in the Persian Gulf Saudi Arabia: The Kingdom Saudi Arabia: The Race with Time Sinan: Until Eternity Souvenirs of Istanbul/Under Turkey's Skies/Türkiye Torchbearers: Bridging the Dark Ages MODERN CONFLICT Arab-Israeli Conflict Golan Heights: Fact and Fiction Middle East 1900-1956: From the End of the Ottoman Empire to the Suez Crisis Middle East 1956-1991: From the Suez Crisis to the Gulf War Palestine: Story of a Land Part I: 1880-1950 Part II: 1950-1993 Suspended Dreams Up to the South Gulf War Gulf War: Operation Desert Storm, The Complete Story Lines in the Sand Middle East 1956-1991: From the Suez Crisis to the Gulf War The Road to War in the Persian Gulf Israeli-Palestinian Conflict A Dream of Justice and Peace with Hanan Ashrawi Intezaar On the Edge of Peace Palestine: Story of a Land Part I: 1880-1950 Part II: 1950-1993 A State of Danger The Struggle for Peace: Israelis and Palestinians Testimonies Torn Living Women Under Siege CULTURE & SOCIETY Art & Architecture Art and the Islamic World Ayasophia Circle within the Square Forces of Change: Women Artists of the Arab World The Gift of Islam The Harem Project: An Islamic Arts Experience The Isfahan of Shah Abbas Saudi Architectural Heritage Sinan: Until Eternity Spain: the Moorish Influence Süleyman the Magnificent Topkapi I: General Outlines V: The Sacred Relics VI: The Treasury Torchbearers: Bridging the Dark Ages Cinema/Craft/Dance/Literature/Music Book of Festivities (Surnameh of Murad III) Camera d'Arabe Cities of Salt Embroidered Canticles Khurasani Kurdish Dances Mirror of Kings: Tales from Kalila wa Dimna Morocco: The Past and Present of Djemma el Fna Painted Bride: Henna Art Among Pakistani Women in NYC Palestinian Costumes and Embroidery Palestinian National Costumes Palm & Pomegranates: Traditional Dress of Saudi Arabia Spain: The Moorish Influence Tales from Arab Detroit Tales from a Book of Kings Turkish Traditional Art Today Media Between the Lines Interview with Hashemi Rafsanjani Introduction to the End of an Argument Lines in the Sand The Killing of Sadat: Why Was Cairo Calm? WOMEN'S LIVES Being Muslim in India Changing Lives: Women of the Middle East A Dream of Justice and Peace with Hanan Ashrawi Forces of Change: Women Artists of the Arab World The Gods of our Fathers The Jews of Djerba The Khirgiz of Afghanistan Living Islam IV: Paradise Lies at the Feet of the Mother Marriage, Egyptian Style Not Without My Veil: Women in Oman La Nouba des Femmes du Mont-Chenoua Odyssey: Dadi's Family On Boys, Girls and the Veil Painted Bride: Henna Art Among Pakistani Women in NYC Price of Change A State of Danger Suspended Dreams Stories of Honor and Shame The Veil and the Republic A Veiled Revolution Women Under Siege FEATURE FILMS Battle of Algiers - Algeria The Cow - Iran A Door to the Sky - Morocco The Dupes - Iraq, Palestine Hamsin - Israel The Horse - Turkey Lawrence of Arabia - Saudi Arabia Lion of the Desert - Libya Mirror of Kings - India, Arabia The Mountain - Palestine Muhsin Bey - Turkey Namuslu - Turkey Night of the Jackal - Syria The Puppeteer - Egypt The Ramayan (Parts 1,2,25,26) - India Al-Risalah [The Message] - Arabian peninsula Yol - Turkey
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