Wednesday, December 31, 2008

Day #20 of 28: 1-Jan-2009

"What the caterpillar calls the end of the world, the master calls a butterfly."-Richard Bach

Welcome butterfly! Welcome 2009!

Jerusalem: clear skies, bitterly cold (for Jerusalem; this ain't Chicago), near freezing. Slight chance of snow tomorrow.

Taking a break from "other" reporting today.

Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Day #19 of 28: 31-Dec-2008

Gaza death count nearing 400. Let's start today with a picture of a 4-year old girl, dead. 4 years old. If she were your daughter, your little girl?


1 day later, part of "Prognostication #2" is already coming true. Not Tel-Aviv, but Beer-Sheba. Why not just everybody stop? And that's not just a rhetorical statement, or is it?

**NGO Endeavors**
My work with the local NGO -- who by the way, has staff in Gaza (as of yesterday they were all physically safe but psychologically & emotionally traumatized, living in real fear of death from hour to hour, day by day. One of the directors called a staff member in Gaza, and she just broke down and cried, not knowing what the next moment would bring to her, her daughter and husband) -- goes on, albeit massively derailed from the original plan and the progress made during my first 14-days here. Software requirements continue to be discussed. A 1hour demonstration has been outlined to take place either 5-Jan or 6-Jan 2009. Their online accounting, which I learned just yesterday is GAAP compliant, will expedite the setup and configuration of the constituent and course regisration software, if/when selected. So, all in all, this continues to move forward inspite of the very difficult tensions not only in Gaza but in general around the entire area.

Day #18 of 28: 30-Dec-2008, cont.

Little peaceful protest at a US Consulate office in Jerusalem as seen from my hotel:

Monday, December 29, 2008

Day #18 of 28: 30-Dec-2008

350+ death count in Gaza. (I'm getting conflicting reports on the exact numbers -- somewhere between 320-350 -- but given that the fighting is not over, I'll leave today's number as posted.)

**Protests Spread**


**Prognostications**
  1. Tanks & ground troops will enter the strip and chew their way through the territory.
  2. Long-range (un-predicted) missiles will strike Tel-Aviv and/or heat-seeking missiles will take out F16s fighters (un-predicted).
  3. Northern Israel border area will be breached (while all public focus is on Southern Israel)
Hope I'm wrong on all accounts.

**Sports**
On a lighter note... While I was channel surfing in Jerusalem hotel, I came across two very intense sports commentators each defending their reasons why futbol team "such-and-such" is better than the other guys. A heavy dose of reality, that inspite of what may be going on in one place, the status quo marches along unchanged. Enjoy the picture.

Sports Commentators

Sunday, December 28, 2008

Day #17 of 28: 29-Dec-2008

9am local time:
Report from UN citing that 9 UN staff have been killed in Gaza.

7am local time:
No new news here. More death. More destruction. Smallish outbursts outside of Gaza, but trivial in comparison. Interesting observation from watching nearly 24/7 coverage on one channel or another (Aljazeera Arabic/English and BBC): nobody changes anyone else's opinion. Those fervently blaming the other side continue to do so. Zero sum game. Sad. Beyond sad. Day #2 of 3-day mourning throughout the Palestinian world.

Saturday, December 27, 2008

Day #16 of 28: 28-Dec-2008






Death toll continues to rise. Now at 271 dead, 700+ wounded. There will be more. This has now been called upon to be the 3rd intifada? Sad times indeed. So much for a peaceful ending to 2008 or beginning to 2009. This will cause pain for many people regardless of nationality, race, religion or creed.

Death & Destruction

Gaza: Israel F-16 fighters strike Gaza targets. Death toll up to 155 and rising. Hamas just concluded a Press conference. This escalation will only result in retaliation. More death.

Friday, December 26, 2008

Day #15 of 28: 27-Dec-2008

Crisp air outside. Thin clouds veil an otherwise crystal sky.

Today: 1st ever "General Assembly" for this NGO in its 60+ year history!! Elections also a first, and the result will be a newly elected Board of Directors, where the term per the new constitution, is a 4-year term. Historical occasion and glad to be able to witness this event.

Intend to post here some interesting concepts found here about day-to-day transportation. (And you thought your commute was bad! :) Stay tuned...

Thursday, December 25, 2008

Day #14 of 28: 26-Dec-2008, Halfway Point

Today marks the midway point of my work and stay here: lat=31.7857, lon=35.2007 Lots to do still!

Invitation to dinner with CEO and his wife -- at the Ambassador. Fan-tab-ulous dinner, wonderful fellowship and rich conversation! What a treat!!

Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Day #13 of 28: 25-Dec-2008, Christmas Day

Merry Christmas!

Heavy rains during the night, now stopped. Lingering clouds waited only a few minutes, continuing to rain. Much needed here in this part of the country/world. A welcome sight!

Past, Present, Future - Jerusalem
Christmas Day Photo

Tuesday, December 23, 2008

Day #12 of 28, 24-Dec-2008, Christmas Eve

Rain. 300 days of sunshine a year. And today it has to rain. The Shepherd Nights' Celebration in Beit-Sahour, just outside of Bethlehem, is tonight. Outside. :( Well by then perhaps the rain will be finished for the day.

4:30pm, Shepherd's Grotto. No rain, but fairly cold, for here. Small, incredibly international group of people. Very interactive worship service with readings and singing in both Arabic and English. (First time ever, I've been singing Silent Night and on my left and right both people were singing in Arabic. Stereo Arabic :) We were all singing to the same tune, just each in his own language. Truly fascinating.

6pm, Brief visit to the introduction of the Shepherd's Nights Festival. Somewhere around 800-900 people, many, many children -- some with their families, some from local schools, and yet others from local orphanages. Wonderful to see this gathering. (Unfortunately, my ride had to leave so I too left early.) Seeing the crowd and the arrangements, however, leaves no doubt there was fun to be had for all.


Scanning the stage prior to the event beginning




Ceremonial Opening by:
Riah Hanna Abu El-Assal (Arabic: رياح حنة ابو العسل



Ellen's Birthday Cake & Christmas cake as well!

7:30pm-12:30am - HUGE dinner gathering, 35-40 people, at Michele's home. His wife had prepared massive amounts of food. Two French guests were visiting, so French was added to the already fluid mix of Arabic and English. Good times, great food, wonderful conversation! As it neared midnight, we watched the Christmas broadcast from the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem. Dignitaries abounded. Cannot even begin to list them all: PNA President Abbas, Prime Minister Fayyad, others from Dubai, consulate ambassadors from many countries among them, and most important from a ceremony perspective: Italy, France, Spain.

Day #11, Part II - Family Bring & Share

Photos/Video clips of a wonderful evening event, including Santa distributing gifts to the children. Song, prayer, balloons, food, fun for all! Enjoy!

Informal arrangement of seating allowed for TONS of fun for the children and the balloons. Also where the swarm of children like 5-year olds following the ball in youth soccer.





Andre' (CEO finished welcoming the people); hands off to Elham




Board Chairman sharing a scripture reading.


University Art/Music student(s) performing


Children playing "musical chairs"


Elham leading a song. Santa's arrival!!


Monday, December 22, 2008

Day #11 of 28, 23-Dec-2008

Well the whopping 1.5% of the population that celebrates Christmas here is getting ready to do so. If you think about it, imagine a party of 200 people, 3 of them are celebrating. It's ironic that in the "Holy Land", this event is marginalized to the point of non-existence -- except for the fact that a lot of folks travel to the Holy Land during these special times. So, here too, there's a highly visibile and important element of "retail sales" inexorably linked to this event.

What follows is a series of pictures of Santa Claus and video clips of the 1st ever Childrens' Christmas Celebration here, featuring Ballet & Dance.












Here comes Santa!!









And a couple of still shots of Santa and the Kids!!

Sunday, December 21, 2008

Day #10 of 28, 22-Dec-2008 - Shrapnel

Today calls for another, my now 3rd visit to Beit-Sahour to visit with their Membership guru Anton to discuss their current home-grown version (in MS-Access) of a potential Membership system, listen to his thoughts.

Actually, unplanned, I was shown their current accounting system, made by an award-winning local company BISAN. This changed my entire thinking about what their potential membership and program registration solutions can now be. More later in the week, or even next week, on this topic.

(click image to enlarge)

This YMCA logo on a whiteboard was made by children of the community of Beit-Sahour. The unusual characteristic of this art work is its material -- shrapnel (!!). The children used pieces of shrapnel from exploded shells that had struck this facility during the early days of the 2nd intifada.

*note: you can also see glue marks that spell out YMCA in the center. The director told me that originally that all those letters of Y-M-C-A were actual bullets. But he said that some of the other children, over time, had taken them off the whiteboard -- probably as souvenirs.

Also, I was shown an upright piano, that still has a large-caliber bullet stuck in the side of the wooden upright section!

Day #9 of 28, 21-Dec-2008

GOOD MORNING J-E-R-U-S-A-L-E-M!!! (a la Robin Williams' style). "Free" day today. Quiet morning even for a Sunday here. BIG Holy week ahead!

Wandered around the immediate area taking in the scenery and getting a feel for my immediate neighborhood. Weather accommodated nicely. Cloudy but no rain. Found the neighborhood "Cellcom" (mobile phone) store - closed. Will try again tomorrow. Looking for GPRS (data) capabilities to add to the N95. A want, not a need.

Cracked open Seth Godin's "Tribes"; saving the last 20 pages. Good read. Quick. Reinforcing not so much earth-shattering.

Meeting with staff for drinks later this evening. All in all, a relaxing day.

Saturday, December 20, 2008

Day #8 of 28, 20-Dec-2008 (updated 6:45pm)

Just in case your Middle East history is a bit rusty (mine was/is), here's a reminder of how different things were -- completely reversed -- as little as just 64 years ago. (I say "little" as 64yrs in the history of Jerusalem is but a drop in the proverbial bucket.)

Below is a picture from 1944 of Five Palestine Pounds, the currency at the time.

Today, of course, Palestine does not have its own currency; they use the New Israel Shekel. There is also no such thing as a Palestine "passport". Lucky ones have Jordanian passports or Syrian passports that allow them passport privileged travel. The others, still lucky, have an Israeli ID, which upon special permission, can allow them to travel to specific countries for specific purposes. The unlucky ones cannot travel outside of the West Bank and/or Gaza at all.

Many people have opinions on the above; these, however, are simply the facts. True.

The rest of this post will be audio/visual w/ pictures & video. Enjoy!

Starting with a bit about The 2009 Olive Tree Campaign.

(Below: On-site Beit-Sahour video clip)



(click to enlarge)

(Below: Shepherd's Grotto plaque video clip)

(below construction details)

Thursday, December 18, 2008

Day #7 of 28, 19-Dec-2008

Here in the Old City, the religious trifecta: Friday, Muslim; Saturday, Jewish; Sunday, Christian. Today is the 1st of 3 special holy days.


I was told the Arabic writing is in "Persian" style. Also told that was odd for 1965 given the circumstances, etc. Well, I think it's just beautiful!

Day #6, 18-Dec-2008, Beit-Sahour

"Amplify" was the word of the day today, and the operative word going forward in my work here with my NGO brothers/sisters.

On the way to/from Beit-Sahour the usual checkpoint show passports/IDs, stop the car, open the trunk (making sure as NGO workers we don't have any WMD or illegal substances ;) - we didn't so they let us pass, both times, and we completed our round-trip visit without incident. However, the return trip was enhanced enormously by the best Falafels in the country. True.

Have coordinated a possible meeting on Monday 22-Dec with NGO director and independent news reporting agency -- in a first effort at identifying our "amplifiers" to help us spread the work of this very good work, farther & faster. Stay tuned...

*notes: thanks to a social media friend, @sleepdog on Twitter, I'm including here a link to a powerful presentation about "Amplified Individuals, Amplified Organizations" Enjoy!

Wednesday, December 17, 2008

Art Lovers Open-Air Exhibit: “We consider youth as a national resource & treasure that we must take care of and develop.”

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Day #5, 17-Dec-2008, Jericho

Visual Potpourri from Jericho visit on 17-Dec-2008


Jericho: Shadi, IT Director @ YMCA Vocational Center


Banner designed/printed by Graphics Department at YMCA Jerico


YMCA Vocational Training Center (VTC)
Poster designed/printed by Graphics Design Department



Entrance sign at: "Al Baiara" (The Ranch)


George (left) and Michele (right) discussing by the waterfalls and children's pool at "Al Baiara" (The Ranch)



Jericho IT leaders (left) in conversation with Michele (right)