For a Middle East Thanksgiving, Turkey and Couscous

The Media Line Staff

Baghdad, Iraq (TML) – As Americans living everywhere from Morocco to Iraq gather around their Thanksgiving tables Thursday, they will be forsaking afternoon football, nippy weather and autumn foliage. Not a few will be complementing it with couscous stuffing instead of cranberry sauce or succotash.

But when it comes to the turkey, only the Americans on the most outlying parts of the region will be forced to make do without the culinary centerpiece of America’s oldest and deepest-rooted holiday.

“In Egypt, they raise a lot of turkeys, so they’re sold at the supermarkets. Here we have almost everything you could think of as far as American food goes,” Latifa Taylor, who works in the American embassy in Cairo with her husband, told The Media Line.

Whether they are teaching English as a second language in Egypt, patrolling the streets of Baghdad, or helping to run oil installations in Saudi Arabia, Americas have substantial presence in the Middle East. For many of them, the holiday acts as a way not only to showcase a national tradition but to engage in a little table-side diplomacy in a region where America is not always the most popular of countries.

“We try to invite our friends from the host country in order to share with them what Thanksgiving is all about – sharing and giving. It’s a nice experience,” said Taylor, who was born in Morocco but lived in the United States for a number of years.

Since the family left the United States in the early 1990s, the Taylor family has kept up the tradition wherever they have gone.

Still, cooking and eating is the focal point of the Thanksgiving holiday and most Americans are careful to make sure the traditional array of food is served.

“We cook Arab dishes on a regular basis, but we would try not to include them in a Thanksgiving meal. I think a lot of the [Middle Eastern] salads would show up. I wouldn’t blink to see them as part of a Thanksgiving table in Jordan,” Sarah Harpending, assistant director of the Center for Oriental Research, an institute based in Amman, Jordan, told The Media Line.

Harpending has lived in Jordan for a decade, but has tried to keep the holiday every year and share it with local friends, mostly Arabs who lived in the U.S. for a long enough stretch to acquire a taste for the holiday and its cuisine. “I feel bad when I miss it,” she said.

She added that most everything that one needs is available in Amman, including cranberries, pumpkin pie filling and stuffing mix. She has had some trouble finding what she needs for a traditional pecan pie, but Harpending makes sure to have certain essentials brought back by acquaintances traveling from the U.S.

Taylor tries to mix a bit of local cuisine into the meal, but not at the expense of diluting the taste and look of the traditional meal. “In some cases, we even try to incorporate local flavors. For example, I will make couscous stuffing, but I also make bread stuffing as well,” she said.

Turkey is of course the essential centerpiece of any Thanksgiving table. Despite the bird being native to the forests of the Americas, it was introduced to Europe through Spain by the returning Conquistadors in 1498, and has since spread throughout the world. Frozen turkey, along with many other traditional American foods served this time of year, is readily available in many Middle East countries.

Beyond expatriate and the diplomatic community, the largest concentration of Americans in the Middle East is the American troops stationed in Iraq and Afghanistan. While there numbers have fallen from a peak of 170,000 in 2007, there are currently about 48,000 stationed in Iraq and each gets to enjoy a holiday dinner in a mammoth Pentagon undertaking. Another 95,000 are in Afghanistan.

Thanksgiving preparations by the Defense Logistics Agency began last spring, long before the typical holiday host would be searching the Internet for a stuffing recipe. The Army’s turkey-meisters have arranged for 244,000 pounds of bird to be readied for the troops as well as 8,600 cans of sweet potatoes and more than 38,000 pies to be served in 225 different locations throughout Iraq and Afghanistan.

“Providing traditional holiday meals to these American heroes are one of the single most important things we do all year,” said Air Force Brig. Gen. Scott Chambers, who commands the agency’s troop operations. “It is an expression of our thanks and appreciation for what they are doing for America every day.”

Young Americans in Israel are also being provided for on the Thanksgiving holiday. The Lone Soldiers Center, a Tel Aviv-based organization that provides help for immigrant soldiers serving in the Israel Defense Forces with no nearby family, is holding a Thanksgiving dinner for 200 American-born soldiers.

“They are alone in this country, but they are still connected to their own culture. It’s a taste of back home. It gives them support and brings them together, and they get to partake in something that they grew up with,” Josh Flaster, director of the organization, told The Media Line.

Not everywhere in the region, however, can Americans comfortably gather around the table and feast on turkey.

Robert Majure, director of the American International School in Sana’a, Yemen, has watched sadly as celebrating the holiday becomes progressively more difficult during the 17 years he has been in the country.

Yemen has emerged at the center of an Al-Qaeda cell targeting Americans and other Westerners. In its latest action, it sought to bring down cargo jets on their way to America before a tip-off to intelligence services thwarted the plan. Last month, the U.S. State Department warned Americans to avoid “non-essential” travel to the country.

“I used to go to Thanksgiving dinner, but because of the security situation there aren’t many foreign people around anymore. I don’t think I’ve been to a Thanksgiving meal in two or three years,” Majure told The Media Line. “Even when you go around town you do a double-take when you see a foreigner.”

The land is not just bereft of Americans, but also turkey to eat and children to create a family atmosphere, he said.

“On Thanksgiving you need family, you need kids,” he said. “Even at the embassy everyone is on bachelor status. People don’t come to Yemen with their children anymore.”

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Egypt’s Embarrassing Baby Boom

The Media Line Staff

Cairo, Egypt David E. Miller – Egypt’s birth rate dramatically increased in 2009 compared to the previous year, casting doubt on the effectiveness of government-led birth control policies.

“A high birthrate isn’t good for Egypt,” Maye Kassem, a political scientist from the American University in Cairo, told The Media Line. “The Egyptian government is unable to provide jobs and education for so many people.”

According to the Annual Bulletin of Births and Deaths Statistics 2009, Egypt’s live birth rate increased 8.1 percent in 2009 from 2008. The bulletin, published by the Central Agency for Public Mobilization and Statistics (CAMPAS), also noted that Egypt’s crude birth rate, an indicator referring to the total number of births at midyear, reached 28.8 per 1,000 population in 2009, compared to 27.3 in 2008.

Most of Egypt’s estimated 79 million people live crowded along the two banks of the Nile River. The most populous country in the Middle East, millions live in shanty towns and squat in tombs as the government strains to provide homes and jobs for its people. Experts warn that uncontrolled population growth will stifle efforts to boost standards of living.

If the current growth rate continues at the current rate of one baby every 23 seconds, or 1.3 million every year, Egypt will be home to at least 160 million people by 2050.

Since coming to power in 1981, President Hosni Mubarak has urged Egyptians to have smaller families and population growth has fallen from extremely high levels. This makes the latest statistics mark an embarrassing setback.

In 2008, the Health Ministry launched an $80 million family planning campaign called “Two Children per family – a chance for a better life.” While Mubarak himself has only two children, the average Egyptian woman gives birth to 3.01 children. Commercials broadcast on public television juxtapose a family with two well-dressed, clean children in a groomed house, with a noisy, unruly family with multiple children living in squalor in a dilapidated home.

“Through these commercials, the government is telling the public: every child born is your responsibility, so don’t have more children than you can afford,” said Kassem.

With parliamentary elections occurring in two weeks’ time, the new data are being used by Egypt’s opposition as political currency to slam the ruling National Democratic Party (NDP). A headline in the Al-Wafd opposition newspaper claimed that “CAMPAS announces the failure of government planning policies.”

Abd Al-Rahman Abd Al-Hadi, a researcher at the Demographic Center of Cairo, said government attempts to curb birth rates are failing because the general public wasn’t involved in policymaking.

“The attempt to dictate policy from the ivory tower isn’t working,” he told The Media Line. “To influence people you must involve them in policy.”

Abd Al-Hadi said poor, often illiterate, rural families depended on large numbers of children as a source of revenue. He added that the Egyptian population was generally suspicious of government policies dictated from above.

“People here don’t believe the government is working for them,” he said. “The government does whatever it wants, and presents optimistic statistics to please the West.”

Abd Al-Hadi said that policymaking must take religion into consideration, as it is a key element in the life of most Egyptians. He added that most religious scholars agreed with the principle of family planning, as long as the method of birth control used is reversible.

“There are scholars who support family planning and those who don’t,” he said. “The problem is that less educated clerics live in rural areas, where the challenge is bigger. These clerics need to be convinced by more enlightened ones.”

Maye Kassem, the political scientist, said that although government provides free birth-control pills, Egyptians traditionally view children as a blessing from God and a source of wealth, not an economic burden. She added that in a society with no real welfare network, large families are regarded as insurance policy for parents’ old age when they can count on multiple children to support them.

“This is a cultural concept that will take a long time to change,” Kassem said.

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UAE Comes To Aid Of Growing Numbers Of Parentless Children

The Media Line Staff

Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates David E. Miller – In Arab society, where family and lineage is paramount, children born out of wedlock with the identity of the father unknown face childhood as an orphan with slim prospects for marriage when they become adults.

But new legislation initiated by the United Arab Emirates’ Social Affairs Ministry aims to tackle the legal confusion regarding responsibilities of their foster families and grants them a monthly stipend of 4,200 dirhams ($1,150). The law also creates government-funded orphanages to be run by a newly established foundation called Tala, which means “little bee” in the local dialect.

The conservative social mores in the Middle East make it too embarrassing for a single mother to maintain any connection with a baby conceived outside of marriage, much less to keep and raise it, so the children are put into orphanages or placed with foster families. But, while small, the number of such children has been growing, straining the resources of the Gulf federation’s resources and threatening social dislocations later on.

According to the Ministry of Social Affairs, about 733 parentless children – strictly speaking they aren’t orphans, as the mother is alive even if she has no contact with her child – live in the UAE. About half live with foster families and the rest in orphanages. To date, there has been no unified policy in the UAE regarding the treatment of these children.

Of the seven emirates that make up the UAE, Sharja is the only one with a specific law concerning the treatment of childless parents.

Adoption is forbidden in Islam, but under a guardianship system, known in Islamic law as kafaleh, children can enter a foster home. They cannot take on the family name of their foster parents, nor can they inherit from them after death. The foster child is also not legally considered a relative, and may marry members of the foster family.

Nevertheless, foster families are considered the preferred option to orphanages, Lara Hussein, chief of child protection at the Gulf office of the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), told The Media Line. Although parentless children face social ostracism, the government has treated them well, she added.

“The childcare system in the UAE is very advanced,” said Hussein. “Here, the country immediately grants these children UAE nationality, which provides them with health care and a social network.”

Indeed, the new law requires foster families and institutions “to implant Islamic morality and principles in the child” as well as “strengthen his national identity and loyalty.”

The problem of out-of-wedlock children isn’t confined to the UAE. Muhammad Shabaneh, head of the family and child directorate in Jordan’s Ministry of Social Development, said cases of children where both parents are unknown are quite rare in the kingdom. “We have less than 40 such cases every year,” he told The Media Line.

But the country’s orphanages and foster families are filled with the children of single mothers. Shabaneh added that his ministry follows the same policy as UNICEF and tries to integrate children into normative families, turning to institutions only as a last resort.

“If the father of the child is found, the child can be returned to his biological parents,” Shabaneh said. “Otherwise, the mother cannot raise him alone for financial and social reasons. In this case, the child will remain in foster care.”

Firyal al-Jarrah, director of the Hussein Orphanage in Irbid, Jordan, said mothers of children born outside of wedlock are often too embarrassed to keep their children. Al-Jarrah added that although society does not generally blame children of unknown parents, they still face difficulties integrating into society.

“Such a child needs to look around a thousand times before he can find a person like him to marry,” she said. “I believe it’s easier for boys of unknown parents to marry than it is for girls.”

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NASCAR’s Hunter, 71, Succumbs To Cancer

Edward Lewis – AHN Sports Reporter

Daytona Beach, FL, United States (AHN) – NASCAR Vice President of Corporate Communications Jim Hunter, one of the original members of NASCAR’s hierarchy, died Friday night after a year-long battle with cancer.

Still ever-present at most of the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series events this year, Hunter worked for six decades as both a journalist and public relations professional. He was 71.

“Jim Hunter was one of NASCAR’s giants,” said NASCAR Chairman and CEO Brian France. “For more than 40 years Jim was part of NASCAR and its history. He loved the sport, but loved the people even more. It seems as if everyone in the sport called him a friend. Jim will forever be missed by the NASCAR community. Our sympathies go out to his entire family.”

Hunter was sports editor of the Columbia Record, had an award-winning stint at the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, served as a columnist for Stock Car Racing magazine and authored a number of books, including the biography on NASCAR great David Pearson, “21 Forever”.

He worked with Dodge’s motorsports in the 1960s and handled public relations for a number of top IndyCar drivers before becoming the public relations director at Darlington Raceway and Talladega Superspeedway.

In 1983, Hunter became NASCAR’s vice president of administration and in 1993 he was named president of Darlington Raceway and corporate vice president of the International Speedway Corporation.

“Jim was a uniquely talented man that cannot be replaced. He was a great friend and mentor to so many in the sport,” said NASCAR President Mike Helton. “His influence will remain with and be carried on by so many of the people he touched. This is a sad day for Jim’s family and his extended, NASCAR family.”

Hunter is survived by his wife of 48 years, Ann Hunter; his children, Scott Hunter and Amy McKernan and his grandchildren Dakota Hunter, and Hunter and Luke McKernan.

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Family Pays Tribute To Pace University Student Killed By Police

Kris Alingod – AHN News Contributor

Pleasantville, NY, United States (AHN) – Family, friends and members of the Pace University football team paid tribute to Danroy “D.J.” Henry Jr. on Friday as the investigation into his death continued.

A memorial service was held at Boston Convention and Visitor Center on what was supposed to be the 21st birthday of Henry, who played wide receiver and defensive back for the football team. The event will be followed by the first game of the football team since his death, a home game on Saturday that will have players wearing black wristbands emobroidered with his number, 12.

Henry died on Oct. 17 after being shot by Mount Pleasant police trying to contain an unruly crowd in a bar in Thornwood. The business management junior allegedly two struck officers with his car.

Police say an officer had knocked on the window of a car parked in the fire lane outside the bar during the brawl. The car, driven by Henry, accelerated and struck the officer, who ended up on the hood of the vehicle. A second officer attempted to pull the first officer from the hood but was also mowed down by the vehicle. The first officer then shot at the car and another officer fired into the car before it crashed into a police cruiser.

Henry’s family and students who witnessed the incident have raised doubts about the police’s reconstruction of events that led to his death. This week, the family requested the Justice Department to take charge of the investigation, citing the leak of a blood alcohol test as proof the probe is compromised. The family has also criticized police for failing to protect gunpowder evidence on the car.

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Inspired By Do Dooni Chaar, Sachin Tendulkar Wishes To Act

AHN News Staff

Mumbai, India (AHN) – A recently-released Hindi film about a middle class family’s struggle to live a better life has inspired cricket maestro Sachin Tendulkar to seriously consider acting in films as an alternative career.

Sachin, who triumphed yet again with his 49th Test century in Bangalore recently, approached acclaimed Bollywood filmmaker Vidhu Vinod Chopra with a request for a screening of “Do Dooni Chaar” for his family and close friends. Chopra, who himself is very impressed with this debut work of director Habib Faisal, promptly arranged a screening of the film in Mumbai, where Sachin, his wife Anjali and close friends enjoyed the light and frothy film.

In fact, so overwhelmed was Sachin after watching the movie that he even expressed his desire to work with Faisal whenever the opportunity arises.

Do Dooni Chaar, which means “Two Two Are Four,” is a working class comedy about the travails of a family of four. The father is a mathematics teacher with limited means while his wife and children dream of a better life, replete with all amenities, including a car.

It is this dream to own a car that drives the teacher to extreme means in order to realize his family’s ambition.

If Faisal’s views are anything to go by, it is the middle class ethos of the film, which inspired the cricketer’s wish to act. Says Faisal, “Sachin did express a wish to relax with my film after his triumph last week. Vidhu Vinod Chopra is a good friend of Tendulkar’s. And luckily for us, Vinod too loved Do Dooni Chaar.”

He further said that the cricketer seemed to have connected to the film because he is still grounded in his middle class roots despite having become a cricketing icon himself.

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