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Sue Cifelli

Babylon & Beyond : Middle East Blogs - 0 views

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    Middle East blogs * 'Just World News' with Helena Cobban * ...Or Does It Explode? * Abu Aardvark * Arab Environment Watch * Arabic Media Shack * Blog: Middle East Diary * CNN.com - Inside the Middle East - Blog * CNN.com - Marketplace Middle East - Blog * Global Voices Online: Middle East & North Africa * Informed Comment * Michael J. Totten's Middle East Journal * Middle East Blog - TIME magazine * Middle East Strategy at Harvard * monem-press * Project on Middle East Democracy * Rootless Cosmopolitan - By Tony Karon * The Angry Arab News Service/وكالة أنباء العربي الغاضب * The Arabist * The Foreign Policy Association: Middle East * The MEMRI Blog * World Blog - msnbc.com Iraq blogs * A Star from Mosul * Baghdad Bureau - New York Times Blog * Blog: Inside Iraq * Catharsis شقشقة * IRAQ THE MODEL * Iraqi Bloggers Central * Iraqi Mojo * IraqSlogger * madly in love with Iraq * The Hanoudi Letter - News Letters * Today in Iraq Iran blogs * Adventures of Mr.Behi * ddmmyyyy * Faith Today * I am an Iranian daughter * inside Iran * Iran News Blog * Iran Visitor Tehran Guide * Iranian.com | Nothing is Sacred * Mahmoud Ahmadinejad - The Official Blog - Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran * Mohammad Ali Abtahi * Mohsen Sazegara's Personal Website * MyMuslimPage.com * Narratives of Suffering * View from Iran Israel/Palestinian Territories blogs * A Mother in Israel * Checkpoint Jerusalem * Elder of Ziyon * Falafel.tv * From Gaza, with Love * Israel Matzav * Israelity * Israellycool * jerusalem wanderings * Life in Israel * Palestine vs Israel * Simply Jews * South Jerusalem: Gershom Gorenberg and Haim Watzman * tabula gaza * the Dry Bones Blog * Tough Dove Israel * treppenwitz Egypt blogs * 3ar
Sue Cifelli

Press "3" for English - 0 views

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    If You Can't Speak Al-English . . ., Comcast Will Open an Arabic Service Center; How Many Defrauded Immigration? By Debbie Schlussel So, you're a Muslim in America, living in America's own little satellite of Hezbollah stronghold Bint Jbeil, Lebanon a/k/a Dearbornistan. And while you live here--legally or otherwise--you simply haven't taken it upon yourself to learn English. Well, if you're like the rest of its customers having repeated problems with Comcast cable "service," you'll no longer have to worry. You can press ithnan ["two" in Arabic]--or, maybe, wahed ["one"]--for Arabic. muslimphonejockey.jpg Dearborn Hezbo Call Center: As-Salaam Aleikum from Comcast I have some questions about this, such as why these people don't speak English and how they're able to stay here if they don't. You must take the citizenship test in English in order to become a U.S. citizen. The only exception is if you're mentally incompetent. So, how many of these uni-lingual, Arabic-only people are U.S. citizens, and whom did they pay off to either give them the answers to the citizenship test, let them skip it, and/or declare them "mentally incompetent"?: In response to a burgeoning demand from the Arab-American community, Comcast is opening its first bilingual service center today to serve its Arabic speaking customers. At 5070 Schaefer, just north of Michigan Avenue, the 3,360-square-foot office is aimed at serving a population that relies on Internet and digital voice functions to communicate with relatives and conduct business in the Middle East. The office will provide information on the latest services and technology to Arabic speakers. The American Arab Chamber of Commerce, the Arab Community Center for Economic and Social Services [DS: Both of which openly support Hezbollah and HAMAS] and local politicians encouraged Comcast to open the center. The chamber conducted a survey to demonstrate the need. Yup, I'm sure that "survey" was "reliable." They'd never lie
Sue Cifelli

Plight of Iraqi Refugees - 0 views

  • Plight of Iraqi refugees shapes nuns' visit to Middle East WASHINGTON (CNS) -- A family of six Iraqis lives in a unheated, single room in Beirut, Lebanon -- the adults unable to work legally, the teenager with diabetes unable to get medical care or attend school. The family -- an engineer, his wife and three children, and the wife's brother -- fled violence in their homeland two years after they received threats and their home was fired upon. Once out of the country, they quickly burned through their savings. For Mercy Sister Anne Curtis, the refugee family helped define what she described as abhorrent conditions for the millions of Iraqis who have fled their homeland, most taking up residence in Lebanon or Syria. She was one of a group of eight U.S. women religious from different communities who spent more than a week with Catholic Relief Services in mid-January looking into the problems and aid opportunities for Iraqi refugees in Syria and Lebanon. CRS is the U.S. bishops' overseas relief and development agency. "I'm still sorting out my impressions," Sister Curtis told Catholic News Service in a phone interview a few days after the delegation returned to the U.S. Jan. 20. During her first few days in the Middle East, she said she felt "an overwhelming sense of sorrow and shame about a U.S. war and the consequences; such massive human suffering."
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