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Malek Jandali: Watani Ana مالك جندلي: وطني أنا

[youtube http://youtu.be/fjqR7H6YumE?]
This is a photo of the mother of Malek Jandali after she was beaten up by thugs of the Syrian regime.

My mom, Lina Droubi after the brutal attack in our home in Homs, Syria by Syrian…Afficher la suite
Photos of my parents, Dr. & Mrs. Jandali, after the brutal attack by Syrian government thugs in retaliation for my performance of “Watani Ana” and attendance at the “Freedom for Syria” rally in Washington, D.C. صور أهلي الكرام بعد الاعتداء الوحشي من قبل شبيحة النظام السوري عليهم داخل منزلهم بحمص، سوريا للانتقام من أدائي “وطني أنا” في مسيرة الحرية بواشنطن دعماً للشعب السوري الشجاع. Watani Ana:

Syria’s martyrs

Some who died for a free Syria

ALI FERZAT GALLERY: Eight eye-catching cartoons to support beaten Syrian artist

If the pen is mightier than the sword, what is the power — then — of a hundred pens?

Many of the world’s cartoonists are determined to find out.

Last week, Comic Riffs put out an open call to cartoonists: Now is the time for the brethren of the drawing board to pick up their pens and paintbrushes and digital pads in support of Ali Ferzat . This came after Ferzat, Syria’s popular political cartoonist, was adbucted and viciously beaten after criticizing the brutal regime of al-Assad; the photo of Ferzat in bed, his battered hands raised, quickly became as much of a visual lightning rod as a cartoon by Ferzat himself.

In response, Comic Riffs soon heard from many cartoonists, including Politico’s Matt Wuerker — who also represents the American Association of Editorial Cartoonists — and Bill Day of Cagle Cartoons. We also spoke with cartoonist Matt Bors , who helps run the excellent comics-journalism site Cartoon Movement.

Within the comics community, you could sense the groundswell. Commentators the globe over helped beat the drum of outrage, and the U.S. State Department even pointedly condemned the attack. But it was from among cartoonists that eventually sprung the rallying cry: “We Are All Ferzat.”

And from that groundswell, we now have “1000 Ferzats.”

Over the weekend, Comic Riffs began linking to some art within the steady stream of cartoons. Today, we offer a gallery to spotlight eight of the most eye-catching artworks:

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1. NEXT MEDIA ANIMATION:

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The Taiwan-based animation house is, essentially, responding to the cartoonist responders themselves. Featured in this video are some of the actual pro-Ferzat cartoons, including those by the aforementioned Wuerker and Day.

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2. MATT WUERKER:


(MATT WUERKER – Politico) Politico’s Pulitzer-Prize finalist was among the first-responders who devoted his deft ink and watercolors to the Ferzat cause.

3. BILL DAY:


(BILL DAY – Cagle Cartoons) Day contacted Comic Riffs last Saturday to expressly answer the open call. Since then, his pointed cartoon has deservedly received wide exposure.

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4. SHERIF ARAFA:


(SHERIF ARAFA – Alittihad newspaper) Comic Riffs interviewed the talented Egyptian cartoonist during the Arab Spring, and he continues to be a pen to be reckoned with from his political hot-spot. On the Cartoon Movement comment thread, Arafa wrote: “Ferzat inspired me when I was a child, I owe him a lot.”

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5. NATE BEELER:


(NATE BEELER – Washington Examiner) The Washington Examiner’s gifted cartoonist offers this powerfully rendered work of art.

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6. TJEERD ROYAARDS:


(TJEERD ROYAARDS – Netherlands / Cartoon Movement) The Amsterdam cartoonist wrote on the Cartoon Movement comment thread: “I actually Googled for cartoons first because I was afraid someone had already thought of this idea…” No, Mr. Royaards — you’re the first we’ve seen to spin the pen/weapon metaphor with such satiric firepower.

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7. GIACOMO CARDELLI:


(GIACOMO CARDELLI – Italy / Cartoon Movement) The talented Italian writes: “The fall of Bashar al-Asad is only a matter of time (and human lives ).”

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8. RICK MCKEE:


(RICK MCKEE – Augusta Chronicle) Through his own line, the Augusta Chronicle cartoonist captures the power of a hundred pens. “We Are All Ferzat,” indeed.

They shoot donkeys, don’t they?

Posted By Blake Hounshell Tuesday, September 13, 2011 – 4:46 PM  

Over the last six months, I’ve watched countless gory videos of Arab protesters who have been beaten to death, shot in the head, run over with tanks, or otherwise brutalized by their own governments. And yet, for reasons that I can’t quite fathom, few scenes have disturbed me as much as this scene, said to be of Syrian soldiers gunning down a group of donkeys in cold blood:

[youtube http://youtu.be/w2ZkJ7jv5pg?]

Syrians on Twitter tell me that the reason for this seemingly senseless slaughter is to punish villagers for support the protest movement by taking away their means of survival. If so, it’s a particularly nasty form of collective punishment — gunning down a bunch of innocent, helpless animals.

The Syrian revolution has been going through a rough patch lately, with little fresh movement to isolate Bashar al-Assad’s regime and what look to be smaller protests inside the country. The exiled opposition can’t seem to get its act together and organize a united front, while activists inside the country are calling desperately for international protection of some kind as dozens of them continue to be killed, injured, or rounded up each day.

It would be bitterly ironic if it took the murder of a few donkeys to summon the global sense of outrage that greeted Bashar’s Ramadan crackdown. But then again, the world works in strange ways sometimes.

A Revolutionary song from Syria

Syria : Our daily bloodbaths

[youtube http://youtu.be/9S4c7-nQsG8?]

(Repeat) Ibrahim Qashoush

This is the musician referred to in the previous post; the song made him very famous and he was murdered – his vocal chords pulled out say some – soon after by the notorious shahiba

Good clip on the Syrian Revolution

[youtube http://youtu.be/ks9DcTR9C4s?]

Syria Cartoonist Ali Farzat بالسلامة علي فرزات والله سوريا حرية

[youtube http://youtu.be/9IxSAKItKYc?]

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