Behold the Mayhem

Translation / Interpretation / Caption Text / Source
Behold the Mayhem of My People Note: This poster won first prize in the The Second International Biennial of Posters of The Islamic World (2007) in the "Palestine" theme/category The poster's caption: "Behold the Mayhem of My People Twice
 as 
tall
 as 
the 
Berlin
 Wall;
 its 
projected 
span 
is 
500 
miles, 
more 
than 
double 
the 
length 
of 
the 
Green
 Line.
 The 
wall 
yet 
annexes 
more 
than 
47% 
of 
the 
West
 Bank. 
It 
comprises 
a 
wide
 range 
of 
violations 
to 
international 
law 
including
 destruction
 of 
land
 and/or 
property,
 freedom 
of 
movement,
 collective
 punishment, 
food,
 education, 
health, 
work, 
and
 the 
Crime
 of 
Apartheid". (The Apartheid Wall) The artist's conception paper: The problem The Wall is the continuation of the Zionist/Israeli expansionist agenda of stealing Palestinian land and forcibly expelling residents, the Wall’s path annexes nearly 50% of the West Bank and almost all of the Israeli settlements. It is entirely unacceptable to build the Wall on the 1967 Green Line, there is a fundamental injustice in caging in an entire population. While the 1967 Green Line is advocated by the UN and many others to be the “international border” between Israel and the West Bank, the fact is that, following the 1948 war and the Zionist proclamation of the State of Israel, communities were forcibly and artificially divided into east/west by this “border”. However, the residents continue to share social services, markets, and familiar ties. To advocate that the Wall could be built on the 1967 Green Line is to legitimize the forcible separation of these communities. Around Jerusalem the Wall is completing the Zionist/Israeli project of “Greater Jerusalem”, which aims at “judaizing” and annexing East Jerusalem into a Jewish metropolitan area. The Wall closes Jerusalem off to the north and south of the West Bank, but remains “open” to the east for the still expanding settlement Ma’ale Adumim. The Wall will amount to the confiscation of 90% of the land in the Jerusalem district. Breaking down the problem By breaking down the problem to its separate components, the following components are revealed: • Palestine • Israel • Entire population • The wall • Pain • Apartheid • Devastation • Destruction • Mayhem • Confiscation • Human rights • Violations to International Law • Burden • Land • Property • Living • ...etc. By combining the components of the problem, and with the help of a common saying ("...burden on my back"), the main idea is yet to be born: The Wall is a burden on the back of each individual Palestinian! Visualizing the problem (Symbols and signs) A symbol is a visual image that stands for a concept or situation. In our case: • The body symbolizes the people and land. • The (kuffeyeh) symbolizes Palestine. • The reclining of the body with the hand on the back symbolizes pain and suffering. • The wall symbolizes destruction, burden, and mayhem of Israel.
English
English
Admin Notes

Very interesting, Thank you.
I will send you high resolution images of my posters once they are published by Saba Cultural Center..

Note: I noticed a duplicate listing of my name in your website's list of artists, one of them marked as iranian nationality (unless this is someone else with same name!).. and I noticed that Tarek (Tarig) Rimawi has been listed as Iranian national while he is Palestinian as his family name suggest (Rimawi) which means (resident of "Beit Rima" village), a Palestinian small village... this is his email if you want to contact him for any reason
"Tarek Rimawi" tzr_designer@hotmail.com, he is residing in Jordan now.

Hani

On Mon, Nov 2, 2009 at 9:25 PM, Dan Walsh wrote:
www.palestineposterproject.org

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1XpESIx7ZW4

On Nov 2, 2009, at 12:15 PM, Hani Sharaf wrote:

Dear Dan,

Its been a long time, I hope you are doing well.
I was wondering if you knew about the Art Biennial taking place these days in Tehran Saba Cultural Center... I Have participated with 2 posters.
Soon they will be published on their website. Do you have any new projects? What are you working on these days?

--
Regards
Hani Sharaf

Jumeirah Lakes Towers
Dubai, UAE

--
Regards
Hani Sharaf

www.hanisharaf.com
info@hanisharaf.com

Jumeirah Lakes Towers
Dubai, UAE