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St. Sharbel to host 7th annual ‘Taste of Lebanon’ festival

tasteoflebanonfestival

(WARREN, MI) — 10,000 Metro Detroiters are expected to attend a three-day festival, which offers authentic Lebanese food, traditional dabke’ dances, family activities, and cultural events.

The 7th Annual “Taste of Lebanon” Festival hosted by Saint Sharbel Maronite Catholic Church in Warren will offer a rich sampling of Lebanese traditions, including authentic Lebanese food made from Michigan produce and ingredients.

The menu features a smorgasbord of healthy and succulent meals, including chicken and beef shawarma, kafta, shish tawook, falafel, kibbee balls, hummus, tabouli, saj-baked bread, and an assortment of Lebanese and American desserts.

The festival will also host entertainment provided by popular, nationally recognized American and Lebanese performers and disc jockeys. Family activities, including face painting, moonwalks, bouncy houses, dance performances, and raffles will also be available.

A Vendor and Craft Fair will be held Saturday (11am-6pm) and Sunday (12pm-6pm), and will welcome local artists, crafters, and fashion and make-up expos.

A portion of the proceeds will be donated to St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, which was founded by Lebanese-American Danny Thomas, who was born in Metro Detroit.

The festival is from 5-11 p.m. on Friday, September 5; noon to 11 p.m. on Saturday, September 6; and noon to 8:30 p.m. on Sunday, September 7, at St. Sharbel Maronite Catholic Church (31601 Schoenherr Road. Warren, MI 48088). An outdoor divine liturgy will be offered for peace in the Middle East on September 7 at 11am. For more information, visit www.TasteofLebanonFestival.com.

Myriam Fares gets married to Lebanese-American

(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — Lebanese singer Myriam Fares announced this weekend that she’s on her honeymoon, shocking thousands of her fans around the world.

A photograph was posted on Facebook of a man and Fares’ hands sporting wedding bands with the caption, “Honeymoon”.

Arab entertainment company Rotana released a statement confirming her recent marriage to a man named Danny Mitri. Mitri is Lebanese but had been living in the United States.

Rotana says that when he recently returned to his homeland, he met Fares and swept her off her feet.

Fares recently released a new music video titled, “Degou El Toboul” which show real footage from her wedding celebration and honeymoon.

Watch below:

Hezbollah says ISIS wants Lebanon

(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — A senior Hezbollah official warned the threat of ISIS in Lebanon cannot be underestimated, stressting that occupying the country was part of the group’s plan.

“The terrorist threat on Lebanon is actual, real and continuous,” said Sheikh Nabil Kaouk, the deputy head of Hezbollah’s executive council. “And whoever doubts or underestimates (the threat) is either ignorant or negligent, and he harms the high national interest of Lebanon.”

Speaking at a ceremony in the southern village of Shaqra, Kaouk accused “whoever denies Hezbollah’s role in protecting” Lebanon of being “oblivious to the truth.”

“ISIS’s decision has been announced. Their pretended slogan is to create the Islamic State in Iraq and Greater Syria, which includes Lebanon,” he said.

Stressing that Lebanon needed a unified defense strategy, Kaouk argued that “hesitation, procrastination, underestimation and aggressive and instigating speech give a free service to the takfiri plan.”

Hezbollah’s MP Nawwaf Al-Moussawi echoed Kaouk, stressing that Lebanon needed “agreements that should lead to creating one united Lebanese front against the takfiri threat that wishes to impose darkness on Lebanon and the region.”

France, Saudi Arabia “finalizing” $3B Lebanese arms deal

(PARIS, FRANCE) — France and Saudi Arabia are close to signing a $3 billion arms deal for Lebanon, the Elysee Palace said late Monday following talks between President Francois Hollande and the Saudi crown prince.

“It will not be signed Monday but it is being finalized,” an aide to the president said.

The deal is for military equipment and arms to be supplied to Lebanon’s army.

Hollande told an official dinner at the Elysee presidential palace attended by Prince Salman bin Abdul-Aziz, who is also the Saudi deputy prime minister and defense minister, that Lebanon was a “great but vulnerable country” which “needs security.”

“We have come together, Saudi Arabia and France, to help Lebanon on the condition that it also helps itself, for its own security,” Hollande added, without commenting directly on the joint contract.

The deal comes as Beirut faces the threat of jihadists on its border with Syria. More than a million refugees have fled the war in Syria by escaping to Lebanon, according to figures from the United Nations.

Hollande added that France and Saudi Arabia had a “shared priority of peace and security in the Middle East.”

Salman is due to hold talks with French Prime Minister Manuel Valls Tuesday.

He is also due to meet Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius Wednesday for talks over the situation in Iraq and Syria, where jihadists have seized swaths of territory and are terrorizing Christians and other minorities.

Last week, Hollande rejected any cooperation with Syrian President Bashar Assad, whom he accused of being a “de-facto ally” of Islamic State militants, after the regime said it was willing to work with the international community to tackle the jihadists.

And in comments carried on national TV at the weekend, Saudi Arabia’s King Abdullah warned the West would be the next target of the jihadists sweeping through Syria and Iraq, unless there is “rapid” action.

“If we ignore them, I am sure they will reach Europe in a month and America in another month,” he said in remarks quoted Saturday by the Asharq al-Awsat newspaper and Saudi-backed Al-Arabiya television station.

The visit comes just over two weeks after another member of the Saudi royal family, Prince Abdul Aziz Bin Fahd, fell victim to a brazen heist in Paris when a gang of heavily armed bandits hijacked the lead vehicle of his 10-car convoy and stole at least 250,000 euros and documents.

Coachella Valley High School retires controversial Arab mascot

coachella-valley-schools(COACHELLA VALLEY, CA) — Coachella Valley High School in Riverside County, California has retired its controversial Arab mascot amid protests by several national groups of Arab Americans.

The mascot did not appear at the school’s season opening football game on Friday night. A belly-dancing genie that often appears with the mascot also retired.

The mascot came under fire last November when the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC) complained that the mascot enforces negative stereotypes of Arabs and Arab-Americans.

“Bombers, billionaires or belly dancers. There’s a lot more to Arab-Americans and the Arab culture and the Arab heritage than what’s being depicted by this high school,” said Abed Ayoub with ADC.

The Arab mascot had been around since the 1920s and was chosen to recognize the area’s reliance on date farming, traditionally a Middle Eastern crop. 

The Coachella Valley Unified School District refused to change the school’s Arab nickname, but did agree to give the caricature a makeover.

A new design has been approved by the D.C.-based Arab-American Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC), and may go into use, but it would need approval from the East Valley school board first.

The possible design:

possible design

According to a statement from Coachella Valley Unified, there will soon be a news conference featuring both the district and the ADC to discuss their resolution.

Lebanese Army receives body of beheaded Lebanese soldier

(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — The Lebanese Army confirmed that it has received the body of one of its soldiers who was beheaded by ISIS militants last week. He was among 11 troops reported missing, believed to be held hostage by the militant group.

An Army statement said, “Around 16:00 today, the Army Intelligence was handed over the body of one of the missing soldiers which will be transported to the central military hospital where DNA tests will be conducted for identification.”

The body of Sergeant Al al-Sayyed was handed to the Lebanese Red Cross at the entrance of Arsal on Monday, days after militants said they slaughtered him.

Sources say his body was delivered by the Islamic Medical Association (IMA), a local health organization that has medical centers in Arsal, Tripoli, and Akkar.

They said an IMA vehicle first brought the body from the outskirts of Arsal to the entrance of the town where he was transferred to a Lebanese Red Cross ambulance.

The committee member said the areas controlled by ISIS in the outskirts of Arsal were closer and easier to access for the handover of the body than locations under the control of the Nusra Front.

Ghali confirmed that there were direct contacts with ISIS militants but did not disclose any information concerning the identity of the mediator.

Lebanese business ‘Com Fu’ – a success story

comfu

(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — In early 2011, after taking the starting a business course at AMIDEAST, Ralph Aoun launched his web-based communications agency, Com Fu (www.comfu.com), to tap into the potential for Internet-based commerce in that country and the region.

Com Fu – with a tagline of “Ultimate warriors of the web” — helps businesses improve their online presence by providing highly functional, appealing, and socially friendly web consulting, web development, online marketing and digital media services.

During the planning stage and his first year in business, and based on what he learned during the workshop, Ralph focused on the development of Com Fu’s brand identity, company culture, pricing strategy, internal processes and knowledge base.

Com Fu’s team currently consists of 14 people, with plans to bring more staff members on board within the next few months. Its offices have expanded during the first two years in operation and plans to expand to the Pan Arab region and the African continent are in the midst of development.

Ralph credits the AMIDEAST for teaching him how to develop a vision and strategy for long-term business success.

The practical training, exchange of ideas, mentorship and networking opportunities provided during the course helped him plan for and realize his entrepreneurial dream.

He notes how valuable the continuous support and mentorship offered by workshop facilitator Carole Abi Saad (co-managing partner of interactive communications firm Cre8mania) has been and how it helped him persist in an unstable political and business climate.

He was also inspired to give back to society, a value that he urges his team to embrace. “We measure success by our ability to preserve a young energetic team that is aiming not only to create business, but also to instill change in society.”

[youtube url=”https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I55t5vqJfJ0″ width=”500″ height=”300″]

Five Lebanese hostages reunited with families

(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — The five Lebanese hostages released by the Nusra Front were reunited with their families on Sunday morning, as concerns grew over lebanese-hostagesthe fate of the remaining soldiers and policemen being held by Syrian militants.

Soldiers Ibrahim Shaaban, Ahmad Ghieh, and Wael Darwish met with their families in Arsal, according to the National News Agency.

All three soldiers were reportedly turned over to Sheikh Mustaphan al-Hujeiri by the Nusra Front Saturday evening. ISF member Saleh al-Baradei and soldier Mohammad al-Qaderi were also released by Nusra Front.

The five appeared on LBC TV Sunday morning, thanking Hujeiri for his efforts to secure their release and expressing gratitude over their safe arrival to Arsal. One of the freed hostages said that they were treated well by their captors and never assaulted or abused.

Hujeiri said Shiite hostages captured by Nusra were in “a more difficult position” than the rest of the hostages, hinting that the militant group had set high conditions for their release.

Earlier Sunday, the Nusra Front warned Hezbollah over the lives of the Shiite hostages.

With the release of the five, all Sunnis, Nusra Front and ISIS are still holding at least 24 soldiers and policemen taken captive during battles with the Lebanese Army at the beginning of August in Arsal.

The Lebanese army soldiers and security service members taken captive by the Nusra Front appeared in a video last week released by the group. The captives, who were kidnapped in the Lebanese town of Arsal near the Syrian border in early August, seem to be in good health.

Salma Hayek on producing Kahlil Gibran’s ‘The Prophet’

(LOS ANGELES, CA) — Salma Hayek remembers the first time she saw a copy of The Prophet, a book of poetry by Kahlil Gibran.

It was at her paternal grandfather’s house in Lebanon. “I’m sorry, I was his favorite. We were very close and I lost him when I was six. He used to have this book on his bedside table. Many years went by and, when I was 18, I found this book again and I read it. For me, it was my grandfather teaching me about life through the book, and I learnt so much about the man who meant so much to me.”

Hayek has returned to the book, time and again, each time taking new meaning from it. In her teens it was the tales of love, in her twenties and thirties, the sections on good and evil. Now, in her forties, it’s the chapter about children. Hayek has a seven-year old daughter with her husband, French billionaire businessman François Henri-Pinault.

The Prophet will have its world premiere at the Toronto Film Festival next month, following a rather spectacular preview at the Cannes Film Festival. The Oscar-nominated director of The Lion King, Roger Allers, wrote the screenplay and directed the segments that inter link the chapters. A who’s who of world animation – Joan C. Gratz, Bill Plympton, Joann Sfar and the Brizzi brothers – are also involved.

Hayek produced the film. She founded her company, Ventanarosa, in 1999 and has always used it to realise difficult projects such as her biopic of the artist Frida Kahlo. “If they tell me it’s impossible and a ridiculous idea then I want to do it. When I had to sell Frida, I would say to financiers, ‘It’s a biopic about Mexican communists and artists. And it’s a love story about a hairy cripple and a fat man.’ Now I’m saying, ‘I’m making this animation about a philosophy book, and by the way it has nine directors attached to it, they all have different styles, nothing looks the same, and it’s 2D. But don’t worry because the author is Lebanese.’”

Hayek also voices Kamila, the girl who discovers the works of Kahlil Gibran. She’s excited finally to make use of her Arabic roots: “As a Lebanese woman, I’ve been looking for a part where I could represent Arab women. In my long career, I’ve not been able to find one, which made me really sad. This film is a love letter to my heritage.”

Salma is Arabic for “calm”, ironic given that the actress is usually cast as the whirlwind in any screen relationship. It’s also odd to hear her speak so vociferously about being Arab. While her grandfather was Lebanese, her parents were born in Central America – her mother an opera singer and talent scout, her father a businessman, who once ran for mayor in the port city of Coatzacoalcos, where she was born. After studying international relations in Mexico City, she landed the title role in Mexican telenovela Teresa, when she was 23. It made her a star in her homeland. Hollywood came after she appeared opposite Antonio Banderas in the 1995 hit Desperado. Superstardom was assured when she appeared in Quentin Tarantino and Robert Rodriguez collaborations Four Rooms and From Dusk Till Dawn.

While appearing in blockbusters such as Wild Wild West and The Faculty, her personal sensibilities were clear from the films that she chose to produce. In 1999 she adapted Gabriel García Márquez’s novel about Colombian peasants living under martial law, No One Writes to the Colonel. It was followed in 2001 by In the Time of the Butterflies, a TV movie based on Julia Alvarez’s novel about the Mirabal sisters, a group of Dominican revolutionary activists.

Her one stint as director came in 2003, when she directed The Maldonado Miracle for Showtime. While Hollywood is willing to accept actresses who become producers, directing is a different ball game, she says. “After I produced Butterflies, the head of Showtime called me and said, ‘I’ve been doing this for a long time, and I want to tell you that you’re not really a producer or an actress, you’re a director. I want you to direct a movie.’ I was so shocked and I said, ‘I don’t think I can.’ But after I did Frida, I was getting offered the same parts, so I went back to him and said, ‘Do you have the project?’ He said yes and I asked to rewrite it.”

She was warned by others not to direct. “I was told if you direct you’ll never get hired as an actress again in this town, because directors don’t want to hire an actress who is also a can director. It’s not the same for actors. We did the movie and I stopped working for some time. Then we got nominated for six Emmys, Best Director among them. But I didn’t go pick it up and I did zero publicity. I would have stopped working even more as an actress.”

The film was nominated for five Daytime Emmy awards and won one, for Outstanding Directing in a Children/Youth/Family Special. But it is true that the acting roles dried up – a change in direction that is also down to her daughter. “Now it has to fit in with my lifestyle. Can I bring my daughter? Is it the right environment for her?”

This is her busiest year as an actress for a long time. She is starring opposite Pierce Brosnan in the Cambridge-set romantic drama How to Make Love Like an Englishman. She’s also in Everly, an action thriller in which she plays a woman who faces assassins sent by her mob boss ex-boyfriend. She is most excited by working on Gomorrah director Matteo Garrone’s period drama The Tale of Tales. “We were shooting in Sicily and Tuscany, but it’s difficult because all the locations are so complicated. I had to climb up onto a rock with a cable attached to me in a 17th-century costume. John C Reilly was in an old diving suit walking against the current, and I’m asking, ‘Is this safe?’”

Dearborn Muslims rally against ISIS

Screen Shot 2014-08-29 at 11.55.52 PM(DEARBORN, MI) — Muslim leaders gathered on Monday on the steps of Dearborn City Hall to strongly condemn the Islamic State or ISIS, saying the militant groups in Iraq and Syria don’t represent Islam or Muslims.

ISIS members are “crazy criminals who are abusing our religion,” said Imam Mohammed Elahi of the Islamic House of Wisdom in Dearborn Heights. “You’re a bunch of gangsters … you’re not Islamic.”

Organized by imams with the Michigan Muslim Community Council, the speakers included both Shiite and Sunni leaders of different ethnicities and races, all united in saying ISIS doesn’t speak for them.

“The beheading of James Foley … is a clear violation of the holy Quran and the teachings of Prophet Mohammed,” said Imam Mustapha Elturk, who cochairs along with Elahi the Imams Council of the Michigan Muslim Community Council. “ISIS neither represents Islam nor Muslims.

Monday’s event was the third anti-ISIS rally in Dearborn this summer that was organized by local Muslims. Two rallies organized by Shia leaders were held in Dearborn in June that condemned ISIS. Hundreds attended both rallies.

About 50 attended Monday’s rally, which included remarks by local imams, Osama Siblani, publisher of Arab American News in Dearborn, Dawud Walid, director of the Michigan chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations, and Steve Spreitzer, president and CEO of the Michigan Roundtable for Diversity and Inclusion.

“They are the enemies of humanity,” Siblani said of ISIS.

Siblani and Elahi asked the U.S. to stop supporting Syrian opposition groups such as ISIS. The U.S. has said it supports moderates in Syria’s opposition, not extremist groups like ISIS. Elahi also criticized Israel’s actions in Gaza.

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