Tuesday 29 May 2007

Dr. Nono is tonite in the radio

I will be interviewed in the program "La Bombilla, El programa mas viajero"( the light bulb, the program that travels the most of all) from Sanlucar la mayor, Sevilla Today, 29th. The program will be at 21:00 Greenwich time, one hour later in Torredonjimeno, Spain, and two hours later in King Mariut, Egypt. It is a very cool program apparently, i never heard it before :P but i spoke yesterday with German, one of the people producing the program, and he told me about it. They have "random" telephone calls to the world and they get to know different cultures. Every program they have specials about different countries and interviews with people that like to travel differently. They called me for the trips in bicycle in Cabo de Gata with the Hull crew in 2002, Maghreb/Morocco that i did with Mr. Sam "fishman" Petragallus along the Atlantic coast in 2002 and a mad adventure in the Atlas mountain and Sahara dessert with Dr. Tomsy Hedley in 2003. The program in Spanish can be heard online in:
Then click on the moving butterfly on the right..But in my mozila firefox doesnt seem to work...just in explorer.

Saturday 26 May 2007

7 wonders of the world

Well, the election of the new 7 wonders of the world has been going on for a while in http://www.new7wonders.com/ .The finalists have been selected. No offense, but for me even considering the statue of liberty or the cristo redentor or the Eiffel tower as wonders of the world is a bit excessive. Buildings that have were erected with much more limited technology and have lasted for hundreds, even more than a thousand years deserve this sort of award much more. Myself i have voted: Alhambra, Taj mahal (two of the most beautiful Islamic palaces ever built, one in mud the other in stone), Machu Pichu (unknown how was built at that height without use of the wheel), Timbuctu (even though i prefer the closely related Djenne Mosque, in Mali as well), Hagia Sophia (in one of my favourite cities of all times: Bizancio, Constantinopolis or Istambul), Chichen Itza (i had to chose a pyramid) and the Great wall (the only building that can be seen from space...in mud as well). I missed one in particular, snif, the Shibam skyscrapers in Yemen, made with mud and stone and 500 years standing there. Building regulations do not allow building these beauties nowadays...
http://www.urbanphoto.net/blog/2007/01/22/skyscrapers-in-the-desert/

The result of the award will be 07.07.07, and as the vote is either though internet and telephone, i am afraid that the greater access in developed countries some of my non-favourites will make it to the final 7 wonders, so u go and vote ur favourites!...thanks god theres more than 7 wonders in the world ;) Another of my candidates would have been the mud maze of Ait Benhadout, Morocco, but im too emotionally attached to Maghreb to be impartial in this one :P


Sunday 20 May 2007

Nonorant in Tugareia

Here i present one the coolest spot (at least for me) in Alexandria. It was an old commercial stock market trading place in the coast road: Tugareia (literally commercial). In here the transactions were carried out sitting and having drinks. They dont serve nescafe or coca cola, just traditional Egyptian drinks. In here the black & white view of the beach in a cloudy windy day:


The cafe has a very particular structure: half of it is just for men to drink cafe/te and shisha (note that the verb to drink in arabic is used for smoking too...so u drink a cigerrete :P). In this area, these men play infinite competitions of the oh-so-popular board games tabli (backgammon), chess and others. The other half of the cafe is the "family part" where there is not board games. Thats where we always sit. The family part is a bit more expensive and they have particular waiters and until very recently just weak shisha was available. The family area has another peculiarity: you cant stand in there, you have to sit or leave. The reason for this is that given the negotiations that we taking place originally in there conversations could get very heated up, people could enter from the street and join the arguments and so on...so everybody sitting is better for ensuring the peace of the place :D . There is another curious rule: when a man and a woman are sitting alone in a table they have to sit opposite to each other, as hands could go on legs easier :) the funny thing is that this rule just apply to new customers the old customers are free to sit and touch :D anyways, that never happened that i saw :P ...In here i just show the pics of the family area. Currently the age of the crowd in here is a mix of very old men that seem to have been hanging around for decades...


...and young group of culturally and socially active people in different degrees: NGO workers, poets, film makers, theater actors,etc...mixed with many foreigners from everywhere. Bahz defined it as a train station.

The paradigm of mixing of the old and the new/young is a useful guide, thats why the picture of the blog of the photovoltaic panel and the mud building as cover of this blog: The vernacular knowledge mixing with new approaches and ideas, the continuous process of learning the from the past to resolve the future. One of the many characteristics that differentiate humans and other creatures is depict the future and come with new solution for facing the future. The currents affairs in the world from an energetical, environmental and political point of view and dominated by capitalist system, are leading us to destruction. Adam Smith got it wrong in a couple of points: 1. capital is created by extraction from the earth, manufacture and selling a product. and 2. the more consumption and trade the healthier the economy. So basically we gotta take from earth, sell, take from earth, sell, and so on...until we have depleted everything, but we would have very healthy economies!! suuure. So basically in the Smith´s model a building that wastes resources and energy is better for economy than one that consumes near to nothing???!!! how ridiculous and preposterous!! An old Afican proverb said something related to the collapse of such model: when you have cut every tree, fished all the fish and polluted every river, you will realise you cannot eat money. Well the model was still (sort of) good when we had an amount of resources much greater than the needs of the world population. But now, the needs of water, food, energy and education/information/culture of an unprecedentedly rising number of people in the planet are simply impossible to sustain using the progress models we are using if we are ALL to achieve a decent quality of life.


Thanks God, a lot of people have realised that and they are trying to understand the problem in more depth and develop the concepts necessary to address the challenges. There are very interesting papers by Prof. Geoff Hammond in (Bath University) and other authors treating the concept of ecological footprint (http://redefiningprogress.org/). Consider how much area (A1) of fishing, farming and industry area is required for provide sufficient energy and goods to a maintain the population in a particular area (A2). If the whole world population would be to achieve the levels of comfort of London with its energetic and gods consumption levels...mmm are we running out of earth? and at the rate of growth of the population? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_population . Take into account that not all the areas are susceptible to produce fish and animals and vegetables and certain goods... and if those areas are degraded to the point that they are over polluted or underwater or extremelly hot dry or subjected to continuous natural disasters? well, thats really what is happening, we are heading towards a massive cataclysm or the apocalypses, doesnt matter what u call it. I hate to say this but i achieved that conclusion from a scientific point of view...we are getting there, and fast!!! Millions of people in their way to death in a painful manner is not good (if ur not a sadistic or extremely desperate...i know, you should be desperate).


Today the British Nobel Laureate Sir Harold Kroto, co-discoverer of buckminsterfullerene molecule C60 (the one that led to the discovery of my beloved carbon nanotubes) had a bitter and justified attack on educational policies (http://education.guardian.co.uk/universitiesincrisis/story/0,,2084784,00.html) , i quote him:
As well as trained engineers and scientists, we desperately need a scientifically literate general population, capable of thinking rationally - and that includes lawyers, businesspeople, farmers, politicians, journalists and athletes. This is vital if we are to secure a sustainable world for our grandchildren.
The facts that a) we use in one year an amount of fossil fuel that took a million years to accumulate, b) we may be on the verge of a climate change catastrophe of global proportions and c) powerful technologies may soon fall into the hands of disturbed individuals with minds riven with those twin cancers of nationalism and religious fanaticism, seem to concern the scientific community a lot more than they do politicians or the media.
I do not agree with one point: powerful technologies may soon fall into the hands of disturbed individuals. It should be written: many powerful technologies have been long time in the hands of some (extremely) disturbed individuals with minds riven with those twin cancers of nationalism and religious fanaticism (and their own personal economical interests)...and many of this disturbed individuals ARE actually politicians and people in the media. Are not the information technologies misused by the mass media to deform reality? Are not missiles being launched daily against civil areas by westerner politicians? Powerful technology IS BEING USED in our faces for not so honorable purposes.


So are we humans predestined to destroy our selves victims of our selfish impulses??? well it will definitely depends on how we consider and resolve problems at global/planet scale. Capitalism has brought advantages, that could have been better achieved by other means, but thats not important now. Who cares how many people advocated for it, promoted it and practice it all way around...we all do somehow, looking at it, hating it and denying it is not going to resolve anything. You gotta play the game, to improve the world requires and effort to change ourselves, is what Prophet Muhammad (Sallallahum alehi salam) called jihad. Jihad literally means effort...nothing to do with terrorists and bombs. Actually for quoting Islam again: the ones who kills one human, is as bad as if he has killed the entire humanity. Clearly many journalists in Europe do not know about what jihad or Islam really means...coming back to the issue of jihad, like every concept in Islam meanings can be interior or exterior. There are literal interpretations and the interpretations that emanate of the Qur2an when you explore the whole thing. And we have to quote the same Prophet again when coming back from winning a great battle: now we come back home to fight the most important jihad, that is the jihad against one selves. Islam gives a higher importance to change the world by changing ourselves, not for killing those people that think differently.


The conclusion of all this is that what we ALL have to do is change and rethink about ourselves in developing and developed countries for achieving global sustainability. In developed countries to help to promote equality at all levels by means of helping other underdeveloped areas (nationally and transnationally) NOT exporting our old models of waste of energy and pollution..oh by they are profitable (at the end we will end up eating our money...). In developing countries, if just one wish: education. But we all know how difficult that is...educational models require social changes first. But as the social changes are slowed down, so is the evolution in education. To disestablish establishments is always painful in one way or another, but sometimes in life we find ourselves in a moment of taking a decision and taking pain. I am sorry for the people that might feel disgusted for the following comment,but ive got a point...the choices are: you can eat camel shit or dog shit; the only sure thing is that you will end up eating shit. The less painful way is changing ourselves: so the muslims do jihad against yourselves if is your faith, and so the westerner or any other religion /culture by any other convincing excuse you want...but for citing Sir Kroto again for the scientific mind "you realise before long that if the world is in anyone's hands, it is in yours." Lets change ourselves by questioning ourselves: what is progress?


Monday 14 May 2007

Exterior of white mosques in the centre of Alex

The most remarkable place in the old city centre of Alexandria is a group of beautiful mosques in the Anfushi area. This neighborhood is a nowadays a very poor area, but still conserves some of the taste of its great past. In this alleyway i found food stalls, parked carretas and children playing football with a can, the Sidi Yakout El-Arsh mosque stands bright white in the background:


In this picture, the contrast is of other nature. I heard once that the aspirations and power of a civilization can be analyzed by finding the tallest buildings in a city...nowadays are not cathedrals, lighthouses or minarets anymore...


The domes in the
Yakout mosque are extremely pretty with their intricate geometrical patterns, the openings that accentuate the verticallity and the typical little spheres topping them:

In here the mosque from the side and the classic stall selling tea and coffee:


In the same square the Sharaf al-Din al-Busiri Mosque and mausoleum can be found. It is a tiny but charming little mosque, were one of the great sufi characters is buried. The long complete name of this man was: Sharafud´-dini Muhammad bin Sa´idi bin Hammadi bin Muhsini bin Sanhaji as-Sanhaji al-Busiri...Al-Busiri A.D.) was an Egyptian of Berber Maghrebi (Moroccan) ascendants from a poor family, who excelled as calligrapher, traditionalist and sufi poet. An interesting fact is that he memorised the whole Holy Qur2an at the age of 13 (!!!). This was the first mosque in Alexandria that i entered; the tomb is said to have el-Barakah (blessing) and that motivates mothers with their little children to visit the highly decorated burial place. Architecturally, the most remarkable elements of this building are the lovely interior marble patio and the silver domes:


The mosque of Abu Abbas al-Mursi occupies the central place in the square. This mosque constructed in 1775 by Algerians, built over the tomb of the Andalusian saint and mystic, Sheikh Shehab El Din Abu El Abbas Ahmed Ibn Umar Ibn Mohamed Al Ansary El Mursi, who joined and then lead the Shadhali Tariqa (Tariqa is a brotherhood, or of school of thought). Al-Mursi ( A.D.) was born in Murcia (as his name indicates) and lived in Seville with his wealthy family working in the trading business. With 23 years he moved to Tunisia where he met El Sheikh Abu El Hassan El Shazly and accompanied him to Alexandria. Here, he stayed as a Muslim teacher for 43 years until his death and was widely regarded for his commitment to help the less favoured in society. The building itself has a very long history, beginning just with the tomb, it was successively enlarged and repaired throughout the centuries until the completion of the final building in the aforementioned date by Sheikh Abu el Hassan El Maghreby. The last reconstruction was done in 1943 by King Farouk, when the mosque was decorated in the Ayyubid style, the popular style at the time of the emigration of Al-Mursi. The shining has been (and still is) visited by many pilgrims from North Africa in their way to Mecca for centuries.

In here the side view of the Al-Mursi mosque from the underground commercial area in the centre of the square:


A close up from the back entrance:


In here the front entrance, where it can be read: "Do not forget Allah", and locals sell some of the typical
made in china stuff:


A detail of the pattern of one of the windows:


In here the balcona with Mashrabiya on the side:


And how not? a cat guards the entrance to the toilet of the Mosque :)

Friday 11 May 2007

Party for celebrating diversity

My friends in England, if you are close to Bath on Monday, please do not miss the opportunity to celebrate diversity of this world at the rhythm of the drums in the University. White people, Black people, yellow people, red people, mongrel people like me and even blue people that want to get in better mood will be there...my spirit will be there. (ps: dont feel discriminated if you are of another colour, my apologies to you). This party needs no excuse, but if u wanna find the catalyst, blame an idiot student in Bath University who invited Nick Griffin from the BNP, citing my dearest Dr. Pek: A former member of the National Front and convicted 'for distributing literature likely to incite racial hatred' A man who is widely regarded as a neo-Nazi and a fascist. A man who denies the existence of the holocaust. A man openly homophobic, Islamophobic and anti-Semitic. Thanks God or Allah or whoever you want, his talk, as well his brain, has been canceled...but the party of diversity is still on!!! attend and have a piece of fun for every person in the world who thinks like us!

Wednesday 9 May 2007

Bears in the Nile

I have been a couple of days in Cairo and along the Nile i found this exposition organised by UN and other institutions. Basically bears have been sent to artists from each country in the world and then exposed all together. It is fantastic the collage of colours, techniques and little cultural references...they all seem to support the same world. I am sorry, but i couldnt record every artist and every country, you can play the guess game, many times is obvious, others not at all:


Sunday 6 May 2007

The Egyptian adventure continues

Well last night was my plane back to the UK and my visa run out...and obviously i did not take it. My place is here right now, i am not going anywhere. The things i have got in here are not many in terms of material possessions, but my heart and my soul are full of joy. I am happy here, there is so much to learn and in so many levels. There are good people and bad people everywhere, there are advantages and disadvantages everywhere. I enjoyed many years the advantages of being living in developed countries* but living in the "other side" (in terms of percentage the "other side" are the majority of people, and theres more than one side!!!) has advantages too. Enjoying and growing, seeing and learning, meeting and talking in both sides are enriching...i know a bit of the Westerner world (or better west-south west European) and even less of this one. I will have to go for the one that i know less cos i will learn more here, its opening more windows. There a quotation from the Holy Qur2an: people choose the inferior over the superior (II,61). How can we discern the superior and the inferior? and what are we ready to accept as a proof? what we call proofs in science is something some how very particular. The proof is accepted when it feedbacks the theoretical background fitting relatively well with it. But what about the whole universe that cannot be quantified? what about those things that we are not able to perceive with our senses or with any technology? all the science in a gazillion PhD thesis are infinitely small compared with the number of events in the Universe at an infinite number of scales. Those proofs, signs and answers sent from the unknown world to the heart and mind are incredibly elusive and/or overwhelmingly obvious. Surely, they greatly determine our decisions in life. I extended my visa another 3 months, the Egyptian adventure continues. I consider i took the better over the worse for myself at this moment...so, in consequence, this blog wont be discontinued, home and open books.

This photo is an obvious translation :P

*progress can be defined in many ways, this issue surely takes many books of development, in this particular case referred from a technological point of view.

PS: last nite i committed a very bad mistake in referencing, now is corrected...i ask for forgiveness and i apologise the 3 people that read the article before i had time to find the exact ref. Ta!