leaveobashar:

AMAZING PROTEST FROM BINNISH, IDLEB (SYRIA): “WE ARE NOT TERRORISTS” PLEASE WATCH THE VIDEO HERE.

Thanks @MadeInNablus @HamaEcho

kateoplis:

Tangible Spirits | NG

In Africa and its diaspora the mask transforms mortals into gods and makes a political point.

diamonds-wood:

A Saudi man plays with snow after a heavy snowstorm in the desert, near Tabuk, 1,500 km (932 miles) from Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, on March 3, 2012.(Reuters/Mohamed Alhwaity)

an Arab Man

Started in 2009, the portrait series “Picture an Arab Man” is part of a large body of work capturing semi-nude Arab men of diverse backgrounds. The project is meant to literally picture a new face for Arab males than the one we are so accustomed to perusing in the mainstream media. Breaking down stereotypes as to how Arabs have been represented in the West, as well as in the East, is one of the conceptual aims of this project. I attempt to do so by highlighting the sensual beauty of the Arab man, an unexplored aspect of their identity on the cusp of change in a society that reveres an out-dated form of hyper-masculinity. Moreover, it is an attempt to uncover and break the stereotypes imposed on the Arab male in a post 9/11 world, and provide an alternative visual representation of that identity.

Thus far, I have photographed men in Egypt, Lebanon, Jordan, Dubai, Palestine and Canada. They have been Iraqi, Syrian, Palestinian, Lebanese, Egyptian, Sudanese, Emirati, Jordanian, and of mixed heritage. My plan is nowto photograph men from the remaining countries of the Middle Eastto truly represent the diversity of the Arab region. Receiving funding to complete the production of the project will also get me one step closer to my ultimate goal, which is to publish this project as a book. The funds that I am requesting will go toward covering my transportation and accommodation, and for printing of prototypes of the book.

Through “Picture an Arab Man”, I strive to do what I can to redefine the image of the Arab man for an audience so accustomed to one-dimensional stereotypes. Most importantly, I hope to properly represent my subjects as diverse and candid men whose only thing in common is their rich Middle Eastern heritage.

Thank you for your support.

Tamara Abdul Hadi

Photographer

fotojournalismus:

A woman holds her daughter on the balcony of her building damaged by Syrian Army bombings in central Idlib, Feb. 27, 2012. More than 7,600 people have been killed in violence across Syria since anti-regime protests erupted in March 2011, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

[Credit : Rodrigo Abd / AP]

leaveobashar:

THE STREETS OF HOMS RUN RED. From Bab Amr, Homs. Shot taken by Spanish journalist Javier Espinosa

Thanks @Basma_

Sunrise Session

It’s a waiting game, you know? Surfers are good at waiting. Waiting for the sun to rise. Waiting for the tide to turn. Waiting for the perfect wave. He’s been out of work for almost a year now. They say the economy is in the dumps. Things could be worse. After all, he’s been out there for almost a year now, waiting.

Nick Cook

theyoungradical:

fotojournalismus:

Riding his bike from place to place, Sham Lal Gandhi speaks through a television during his campaign for Member of Legislative Assembly in Amritsar, Punjab Province, India, on Thursday, Jan. 26. State assembly elections take place on January 30.

[Credit : Narinder Nanu / AFP / Getty Images]

sometimes the world can still surprise me