Massacre-The streets of Paris are as familiar to me as the streets of BeirutJoey Ayoub (Globalvoices) - 14 November 2015 These have been two horrible nights of violence. The first took the lives of over 40 in Beirut; the second took the lives of over 120 people and counting in Paris. It also seems clear to me that to the world, my people’s deaths in Beirut do not matter as much as my other people’s deaths in Paris.
I come from a privileged francophone community in Lebanon. This has meant that I have always seen France as my second home. The streets of Paris are as familiar to me as the streets of Beirut. I was just in Paris a few days ago. These have been two horrible nights of violence. The first took the lives of over 40 in Beirut; the second took the lives of over 120 people and counting in Paris. It also seems clear to me that to the world, my people’s deaths in Beirut do not matter as much as my other people’s deaths in Paris. We do not get a “safe” button on Facebook. We do not get late night statements from the most powerful men and women alive and millions of online users. We do not change policies which will affect the lives of countless innocent refugees.This could not be clearer. I say this with no resentment whatsoever, just sadness. It is a hard thing to realize that for all that was said, for all the progressive rhetoric we have managed to create as a seemingly united human voice, most of us members of this curious species are still excluded from the dominant concerns of the “world”. And I know that by “world”, I am myself excluding most of the world. Because that’s how power structures work. I do not matter. My “body” does not matter to the “world”. If I die, it will not make a difference. Again, I say this with no resentment. That statement is merely a fact. It is a political fact, true, but a fact nonetheless. Maybe I should have some resentment in me, but I am too tired. It is a heavy thing to realize. I understand Ta-Nehisi Coates when he speaks of the Black Body in America I know that I am fortunate enough that when I do die, I will be remembered by friends and loved ones. Maybe my blog and an online presence might even gather some thoughts by people around the world. That is the beauty of the Internet. And even that is out of reach to too many. Never so clearly as now have I understood what Ta-Nehisi Coates wrote about when he spoke of the Black Body in America. I think there is a story to be told of the Arab Body as well. The Native American Body. The Indigenous Body. The Latin American Body. The Indian Body. The Kurdish Body. The Pakistani Body. The Chinese Body. And so many other bodies. The Human Body is not one. It sure feels that it should be by now. Maybe that in itself is an illusion. But maybe it is an illusion worth preserving because without even that vague aspiration towards oneness on the part of some part of the body, I am not sure what sort of world we would be living in now. Some bodies are global, but most bodies remain local, regional, “ethnic”. My thoughts are with all the victims of today’s and yesterday's horrific attacks, and my thoughts are with all those who will suffer serious discrimination as a result of the actions of a few mass murderers and the general failure of humanity’s imagination to see itself as a unified entity. My only hope is that we can be strong enough to generate the opposite response to what these criminals intended. I want to be optimistic enough to say that we are getting there, wherever “there” might be. We need to talk about these things. We need to talk about Race. We just have to. |
Jusqu'au 4 mars 2026 les mercredis à 19h30
29 – 31 mai 2026
17 - 18 - 19 Avril 2026 au Grand Palais de Paris
![]() Love Like A Man, seul hit des Ten Years After au Royaume-Uni Si c'est Woodstock qui leur permet d'être mondialement connus, c'est le titre "Love Like A Man", en 1970, qui ouvre aux Ten Years After les portes du UK Singles Chart. Retour sur l'un des plus gros succès de l'une des formations majeurs du British Blues Boom. Lire la suite, ici.ici |
![]() Dès la nuit tombée, l’intérieur des Invalides s’anime grâce à la magie de la lumière, de la musique orchestrale et du vidéo mapping pour dévoiler ses décors et son patrimoine exceptionnels. Et, pendant près de 50 minutes, vous êtes conviés à une déambulation nocturne et sensorielle. Guidés par la lumière, vous explorez les six chapelles qui entourent la crypte du tombeau de Napoléon Ier, où progressivement, l'invisible se révèle. Un spectacle magnifique. Pour en savoir plus, ici. |
Neil Toung, un geste pour le Groenland
Neil Young vient de poser un geste à la fois symbolique et politique. Sur son site neilyoungarchives.com, il a annoncé faire don de l'intégralité de son catalogue musical et de ses films musicaux aux habitants du Groenland pour une durée d'un an. |
L'ONG, Oxfam, dénonce la fortune record des milliardaires
Les 12 milliardaires les plus riches « possèdent plus de richesses que la moitié la plus pauvre de l'humanité », environ quatre milliards de personnes, dénonce Oxfam dans son rapport sur les inégalités, qui dresse d'année en année le constat d'une hausse de la fortune des super-riches. |
4e Conférence mondiale pour l'égalité femmes-hommes
Parus accueille les 22 et 23 octobre 2025 les représentants d'une quinzaine de nations pour la 4e Conférence ministérielle des diplomaties féministes qui vise à mettre en place une action mondiale face aux blocages et aux reculs des droits des femmes. |
Elvis Presley : un nouveau film-concert
Un demi-siècle après la dernière apparition scénique d’Elvis Presley, Baz Luhrmann proposera, en 2026, EPiC: Elvis Presley in Concert, un film-concert inédit rassemblant des images restaurées de la légendaire résidence de Las Vegas en 1970 et de la tournée américaine de 1972. |
L'iran facilite les opérations Transgenre
L'Iran combat le mouvement LGBT dans son pays mais favorise les opérations pour les étrangers qui désirent changer de sexe. Business is business ! |