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« July 10, 2010 - August 09, 2010 »
 
07 / 10
Start: 6:00 pm
End: 8:00 pm

The American Iranian
Friendship Council presents

 

Iran Forum:

No
to War! No to Crippling Sanctions!

Yes
to the Iranian Civil Rights Movement

 

Room190, School of
Business Administration,

Portland State University

631 SW Harrison St.
Portland, OR 97201

 

Saturday, July 10, 2010
at 6 PM

 

While US and EU expanded the United Nations
Security Council’s resolution to impose further sanctions on Iran,
reports from many sources including a recent article by Noam Chomsky are
indicating that the threats of a military strike on Iran is as close as
it has ever been.  The President Obama’s campaign promises
of engagement with Iran have now replaced with Secretary Clinton’s
campaign promises of toughening sanctions against the country and so
called “massive retaliation”.

 

Dr. Hamid Dabashi is the
Hagop Kevorkian Professor of Iranian Studies
and Comparative Literature at Columbia
University
in New York. He was born in Ahvaz, Iran . After
attending college in Tehran he received a dual Ph.D. in Sociology
of Culture
and Islamic Studies from the University
of Pennsylvania
in 1984, followed by a postdoctoral fellowship
at Harvard University.

 

Since last year’s disputed elections in Iran Professor Dabashi
has become a prominent voice in major media outlets, such as CNN
and the New York Times, to narrate “the civil rights
movement” in Iran, a term he used for the first time to define the Green
movement.
In explaining the Green Movement he wrote: “With the ring of that simple but resounding question, "Where
is my vote?" millions of Iranians have forced the hand of the Islamic
Republic, exposing its naked brutality. If the world were to listen and
watch carefully, it would see that the ancient Greek theory of
democracy; the French Revolution's cry for liberty, equality and
fraternity; the American revolt against despotism and tyranny; and
ultimately the American Civil Rights
Movement of the 1950s and 1960s are today all resonating in the Iranian
cry for freedom.”

 

Dabashi believes that “This movement has been decades, if not centuries, in the
making. And it needs no American money to sustain itself. The only thing
it needs is the moral voice of the American civil rights movement to come to its
aid.”
In objecting to US funding of interference in Iran’s
internal affairs Dabashi writes: “Whatever the fate of
the Islamic republic, the noble cause of civil liberties will remain
constant in Iran and will emerge as a model for the region. By wedding
the freshly cut flower of Neda Aqa-Soltan's young life in the fertile
soil
of Rosa Parks' memory, Iranians and Americans will finally come
together in their common dreams of basic human decency.”

 

It's sometimes assumed
by neo-orientalist commentators that people who are struggling in the
Middle East are either white man's agents, or ignorant
fundamentalists against the outside's world.  Hamid Dabashi
has said it so perfectly: “Perhaps the single most important problem
with American politics, policymakers and pundits -- left or right,
liberal or conservative, Democrat or Republican -- is that they think
that anything that happens anywhere in the world is about them or is
their business. The imperial hubris that seems definitive of the DNA of
this political culture wants either to invade and occupy other people's
homelands and tell them what to do, or else disregard people's
preoccupation with their own issues and impose, demand and exact
"engagement" with them, whether they want it or
not." 

 

Professor Dabashi has written more than 20 books, edited 4, and
contributed to many more. Dabashi’s books include
Authority in Islam; Theology of Discontent;
Truth and Narrative; Close Up: Iranian Cinema; Staging
a Revolution: The Art of Persuasion in the Islamic
Republic of Iran
; and Iran: a People Interrupted.
http://www.hamiddabashi.com

 

Mehdi Saharkhiz is a
graphic designer, photographer, journalist and blogger from Iran who now
lives in the United States.
Initially not political, he was inspired by his father, Isa
Saharkhiz, to become involved. The elder Saharkhiz, a prominent Iranian
journalist and former spokesman for Mehdi Karroubi, is an
outspoken leader in the pro-democracy Green movement.  He
was arrested last July in follow up to the disputed presidential
elections and remains in prison.

 

A unique feature of the Green movement is the
fact that in the absence of the professional reporters citizen
journalists report first-hand accounts from the streets of Iran,
responding to the movement’s call for “everyone to be the media”.  Since
the beginning of the uprising Mehdi Saharkiz has uploaded more than
2,600 separate “citizen journalism” video clips to his
YouTube site.
http://onlymehdi.saharkhiz.net

 

This event is made
possible in part by a generous grant from

 the McKenzie River
Gathering Foundation (
www.MRG.org) .

07 / 11
07 / 12
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07 / 15
07 / 16
07 / 17
07 / 18
07 / 19
07 / 20
07 / 21
07 / 22
07 / 23
07 / 24
07 / 25
07 / 26
07 / 27
07 / 28
07 / 29
Start: 6:00 pm
West Hayden Island: Can we develop industry and
protect habitat next to each other?

West Hayden Island (WHI) has suddenly become the center of
Portland.

This undeveloped portion of the island is owned by the Port of Portland which has been considering developing it for a marine terminal
for a number of years. The same area, however, is a critical wildlife habitat,
vital for the survival of threatened trees, birds and fish.  Last year, the
Portland City Council formed a Xommunity Working Group (CWG) and charged it with developing a plan that would meet
both important goals: marine industrial use and habitat
preservation.
The CWG was unable to draft a satisfactory plan,
highlighting the difficulty of merging both needs. 

The city needs
waterfront industrial land, according to several studies. At the same time, the
habitat on WHI is a fragile and valuable resource the City and
region want to protect. Since the CWG could not find a solution, Mayor Sam Adams
is presenting a resolution to the council that, if passed, will instruct the
Bureau of Planning and Sustainability to come up with an annexation and
development plan by July 2011. 

The major features of this plan would be
a single riverfront terminal, situated on approximately 300 acres of land
already in partial industrial use, and the protection and enhancement of around
500 acres of wild habitat.

The Portland City Council will hold a public hearing on the Mayor's
resolution at 6 p.m. this Thursday, July 29 at City Hall,
after which
the council is scheduled to vote.

This is your opportunity to
express your view on what the city should do with West Hayden
Island, and your testimony is invited. You may already know what you think is
the right direction for the city to take; if you want to look more closely at
the issues, there are links to the right that can help you make a
decision.

The Mayor’s Resolution
will not be a final decision, but it will set the city’s course for the
future of West Hayden Island.
The resolution will require a significant
public participation process, and Thursday evening is the time for that to
start. 

Portland’s best decisions are those informed by input
from its citizens.
Help the city make the best decision on West Hayden
Island by attending and speaking out this Thursday. Or, if you cannot
attend the meeting, submit your written comments
to City Councilor
Amanda Fritz at her website.

Action Alert from Onward Oregon


07 / 30
Start: 7:00 pm
End: 9:00 pm

Oregon Physicians for Social Responsibility offers free
tickets to see Countdown to Zero

Reserve your free tickets to see Countdown to Zero, the new film about
modern nuclear threats from the makers of An Inconvenient Truth.

When: Friday, July 30th, 7:00pm
Where: Cinema 21, 616 NW 21st
Avenue, Portland, OR
 

Film screening followed by discussion with local peace and
anti-nuclear activists about what we can do to demand zero.

Reserve your free tickets now!

As part of our Summer of Anti-Nuclear Activism campaign, Oregon PSR
is offering a limited number of free tickets to the
film opening on a first come, first served basis.

Email the names
in your party and your phone number, or call 503-274-2720 and leave the
names in your party, phone number and email address. Limit 4 tickets per
person. 

Countdown to Zero traces the history of the atomic
bomb from its origins to the present state of global affairs: nine
nations possess nuclear weapons capabilities with others racing to join
them, with the world held in a delicate balance that could be shattered
by an act of terrorism, failed diplomacy, or a simple accident. Written
and directed by acclaimed documentarian Lucy Walker (The Devil’s
Playground
, Blindsight), the film features an array of
important international statesmen, including Jimmy Carter, Mikhail Gorbachev, Pervez Musharraf and Tony Blair. Countdown to Zero
makes a compelling case for worldwide nuclear disarmament, an issue more
topical than ever.

07 / 31
08 / 1
Start: 12:00 pm
End: 2:57 pm

TRAVIS DRUMS!

12-2 p.m. August
1, 2010

Peace Memorial (East end of the Steel
Bridge, N.E. Interstate and Oregon)

Crawford_00319.jpglogo.jpg

 

Hello. 
I am Lynn Bradach.

 

My
oldest son, Marine Corporal Travis Bradach-Nall, was killed by the
explosion of
a U.S. cluster bomb, during unexploded munitions clearing operations in
Karbala, Iraq, on July 2, 2003.  Since then, I have been working to end
war, clear the refuse of munitions left from war and, most recently, for
adoption of national legislation and the international Convention to
limit and
ultimately ban use of cluster munitions. 

 

I
was a speaker at the November 2008 Geneva meetings on the international
Convention on Cluster Munitions and was in Oslo, Norway in December 2008
for
the signing of the Convention. 

 

Now,
more than ever, I am pushing for U.S. adoption and ratification of the
Convention.

 

The
Convention comes into effect, for the 106 countries that have signed it
and 37
countries that have ratified it, on Sunday, August 1, 2010.  On that
day,
there will be a drum demonstration to bring attention to the coming into
effect
of the Convention, around the World.  Details are at: 
http://www.stopclustermunitions.org/countdown/

 

I
am seeking drummers of every type and talent to assemble with me at
noon,
Sunday, August 1,

2010 at the Overlook section of the Eastside Portland Esplanade,
just
north of the Morrison Bridge, to drum in observance of the occasion and
to show
support for the Convention.

 

Travis Drums.jpg.

 

PLEASE JOIN
ME!!!! For more information, or to confirm, email me at:
lbradach@handicap-international.us

 

08 / 2
08 / 3
08 / 4
08 / 5
08 / 6
Start: 6:00 pm
End: 8:00 pm

Please join us for "Remember Hiroshima & Nagasaki, Create a
Nuclear-Free Future", an event commemorating the 65th anniversary of the
atomic bombings of these two Japanese cities. We will have special
guest speakers, music, art, dance, and a chance for you to get involved
in creating a nuclear-free future!

When: Friday, August 6th, 2010, 6:00pm

Where: Japanese American Historical Plaza on
the Portland waterfront (NW Naito Parkway and Couch Street)

Sponsored by Oregon Physicians for Social Responsibility, American Friends Service Committee,
Peace and Justice Works, Ecumenical Ministries of Portland, SGI
Buddhists, Multnomah Friends Meeting, Women's International League for
Peace and Freedom, Oregon Hiroshima Club, Japanese American Citizens
League, and others.

Please download the flyer for the event and help us spread the word!

08 / 7
08 / 8
08 / 9