Hadani ditmars biography of donald
Home / Celebrity Biographies / Hadani ditmars biography of donald
As Iraq continues to weather violent occupation, theocratic thuggism and civil strife, Dancing in the No-Fly Zone serves as an eerily prescient tribute to a culture and a people at the breaking point. Employing architecture as metaphor in the cradle of civilization, the book examines the ravages of decades of war and oppression on the Iraqi soul, and what it means for our world heritage.
Hadani was stationed in Beirut for nine months in 1992 working on an interactive theatre/video project that brought together displaced Muslim and Christian children, wrote for the first joint Israeli-Palestinian magazine post Oslo accord in 1994 era Jerusalem, and continues to report from the occupied territories on cultural and political issues.
As Iraq continues to weather violent occupation, theocratic thuggism and civil strife, Dancing in the No-Fly Zone serves as an eerily prescient tribute to a culture and a people at the breaking point.
Content Feed
Not only do “uncovered” female body parts make some people feel “uncomfortable” – so does being “too” covered up.
The introduction of stricter homeland security measures do not make citizens safer.
Both Canada and Israel have national mythologies that perpetuate their status as kinder, peace loving democracies.
The tragic decline in Iraqi women’s status is the result of 30 years of war and occupation.
How should ‘heroism’ be defined in the context of war and occupation?
BIO
Biography
Author, journalist, and photographer Hadani Ditmars has reported from Lebanon, Israel/Palestine, and Iraq, often examining the human costs of sectarian strife as well as cultural resistance to war, occupation and embargo.Currently, Hadani is a co-editor at the New Internationalist magazine.She was stationed in Beirut for nine months in 1992 working on an interactive theatre/video project that brought together displaced Muslim and Christian children, wrote for the first joint Israeli-Palestinian magazine post Oslo accord in 1994 era Jerusalem, and continues to report from the occupied territories on cultural and political issues.
She traveled to Iran for Sight and Sound and Vogue magazine in 1997 (when Rafsanjani was in power), reporting on gender issues, politics and cinema.
Hadani's work, which has also taken her to Zanzibar, Guatemala, Colombia, Egypt, Ireland, Indonesia, Italy, India, Jordan, Tunisia and Uzbekistan, has been published in the New York Times, the London Independent, The Globe and Mail, Newsweek, Time, Maclean's and Ms.
Magazine and broadcast on CBC and BBC radio and television.
Hadani has been a regular CBC Radio's Dispatches contributor since the show's debut in 2001. Hadani’s next book focuses on her return to Israel/Palestine and Lebanon a decade and half after her first sojourns there.
ADDRESS
City: often in transit, Province/Territory: Outside of Canada
PUBLICATIONS
Home Books Journalism Speaking and Residencies Contact | |
| |
© Hadani Ditmars |
.
Hadani's next book Ancient Heart, is a political travelogue through seven historical sites.She was also a regular current affairs commentator on Rogers OMNI television program The Standard.Her best selling book Dancing in the No Fly Zone (chosen by the Globe and Mail as one of 100 best and most influential books of 2005) recounts her time in Iraq from 1997 until the fall of 2003 and is one of the few recent books on the troubled nation that covers pre and post invasion reality.