Precarious Adolescence – Part One: What Osama Bin Laden and the killing of civilians must teach the West about democracy and responsibility
Between Deserts
by Alex
3M ago
This three-part essay looks at systemic phenomena which represent a turning point in the adolescence of human collective consciousness. Part one looks at how the killing of civilians in Israel and Palestine should force dominant Western powers to fully integrate the values modern democracy is founded on.Part two looks beyond the moral realm at how a denial of democratic responsibility is undermining the Western social ..read more
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From Brutality to Beauty: Collective trauma, culture and meaning – Part two
Between Deserts
by Alex
1y ago
Read part one here. In 2019 I travelled by taxi on the highway north from the Syrian capital, Damascus, to Aleppo. It was late April, the most beautiful time to be in Syria. I had last visited Aleppo a decade earlier, before the war, when it was still Syria’s largest city. The war had raged for six years when my journalist father and I took ..read more
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Nada: Easter tragedy washes away lives and livelihoods of Timor-Leste’s most vulnerable –
Between Deserts
by Alex
1y ago
Words by Alex Ray and Maria Lopes for UNDP Timor Leste – Photos by Alex Ray – (c)UNDP Timor-Leste 2021 Nada is the Tetum and Portuguese word for ‘nothing’ and a good summary of what Flavia Ribiero Soares and her family – of seven children and one grand-child – have left after the Easter Sunday cyclone and flooding. The cyclone devastated communities across Timor-Leste ..read more
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Nada: Easter tragedy washes away lives and livelihoods of Timor-Leste’s most vulnerable –
Between Deserts
by Alex
1y ago
Words by Alex Ray and Maria Lopes for UNDP Timor Leste – Photos by Alex Ray – (c)UNDP Timor-Leste 2021 Nada is the Tetum and Portuguese word for ‘nothing’ and a good summary of what Flavia Ribiero Soares and her family – of seven children and one grand-child – have left after the Easter Sunday cyclone and flooding. The cyclone devastated communities across Timor-Leste ..read more
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From Brutality to Beauty: Collective trauma, culture, and meaning – Part One.
Between Deserts
by Alex
1y ago
Part one of a three-part series reflecting on the role of culture in providing meaning for devastated communities. “Can you ask him to explain what happened that day?” asked my journalist father sitting alongside me, notebook in hand. “There have been different accounts in the media and some video that might have been faked. I need to clarify what happened.” Tarek sat in front of ..read more
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A Storm, A Traumatised Nation, And A Dog Named Bob
Between Deserts
by Alex
1y ago
A sequence of testing circumstances in Timor-Leste in 2021 showed how quickly the veneer of success dissolves when the right solvent is applied ..read more
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Burning ambition: Timor-Leste’s waste management problem
Between Deserts
by Alex
3y ago
by Alex Ray Originally published by DevPolicy Blog on May 24 2021 Fifty kilometres east of Dili is the site of one of Timor-Leste’s most renowned scuba diving locations. It is reached via the nearby Santo Antonio Grotto rest stop where timber-slat huts sell plastic bottled water and noodles in Styrofoam cups. Directly behind the shops are mountains of burning plastic packaging in a seasonally-dry ..read more
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HATUTAN: Communities empowered through school meals program
Between Deserts
by Alex
3y ago
by Alex Ray, for Care International (2020) Eight o’clock in the morning Monday to Saturday is ‘rush hour’ in Timor-Leste’s Liquica municipality, when the area’s remote muddy roads are dotted with children grouped in camaraderie, walking long distances to school. For 265 of them, aged 5-12, their trip to Faulara primary school takes up to two hours each way, with regular river crossings in wet-season ..read more
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Health for All: The volunteers serving Timor-Leste’s remote communities
Between Deserts
by Alex
3y ago
A trip into the mountains touches on some of the fundamental challenges still facing rural communities in Timor-Leste. Words and photos by Alex Ray When doctor Andre Belo told me how he spends most weekends I was impressed and wanted to know more. Nearly every Friday he leaves his workplace, the United Nations clinic in Dili, the capital of Timor-Leste, to lead volunteer medical missions ..read more
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Poetry: Life is like and ocean wave
Between Deserts
by Alex
3y ago
An Arabic poem by Alex Ray, written in 2017 while living in Beirut and traveling Lebanon’s coastline in beaten-up minivans. Published by Rusted Radishes in Volume 8 “Sea Change”. Translation to come soon.   ..read more
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