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Dressed to Kill: Vogue’s Profile of Asma al Assad

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Asma al Assad vogue

A glowing profile of the wife of Syrian president Bashar al-Assad written two years ago for a major fashion publication

Written by Joan Juliet Buck for Vogue magazine, the article entitled “A Rose in the Desert” serves as a litmus test for cynicism when considered against the backdrop of mass-murder, torture and imprisonment of tens of thousands of Syrians that has occurred since the story was first published.

In March, 2011, the 3,200-word story on Asma al-Assad praised the “wildly democratic” family-centric couple who vacation in Europe, nurture Christianity, and leave their security guards at home when cruising around Damascus with Brad and Angelina. Buck declared that “Syria is known as the safest country in the Middle East” and described the couple’s aim to give Syria a “brand essence.”

With catastrophic mistiming, the story was published online right before Syria’s Arab Spring erupted. It was later revealed to be the result of a coordinated public relations effort managed by Brown Lloyd James, the same firm that handled media spin for Libya’s Qaddafi regime.

The profile became a heated topic among journalists and activists, and Vogue quickly removed the article and all references to it from their website. The magazine, published by Condé Nast, boasts over 11 million readers. It later defended the story saying it was “a way of opening a window into this world a little bit,” with a qualifier that the nation under Assad was “not as secular as we might like.”  The URL is still visible, but a click gets you this image:

Vogue-Magazine-Missing-Assad-StoryLast week, news and gossip website Gawker reprinted the full article, without author or Vogue approval. It then went down from Vogue. But we found the last copy online and filed it here. You can download the PDF here.

We have found the first paragraphs from the original Vogue article:

Asma al-Assad is glamorous, young, and very chic–the freshest and most magnetic of first ladies. Her style is not the couture-and-bling dazzle of Middle Eastern power but a deliberate lack of adornment. She’s a rare combination: a thin, long-limbed beauty with a trained analytic mind who dresses with cunning understatement. Paris Match calls her “the element of light in a country full of shadow zones.” She is the first lady of Syria.

Syria is known as the safest country in the Middle East, possibly because, as the State Department’s Web site says, “the Syrian government conducts intense physical and electronic surveillance of both Syrian citizens and foreign visitors.” It’s a secular country where women earn as much as men and the Muslim veil is forbidden in universities, a place without bombings, unrest, or kidnappings, but its shadow zones are deep and dark. Asma’s husband, Bashar al-Assad, was elected president in 2000, after the death of his father, Hafez al-Assad, with a startling 97 percent of the vote. In Syria, power is hereditary. The country’s alliances are murky. How close are they to Iran, Hamas, and Hezbollah? There are souvenir Hezbollah ashtrays in the souk, and you can spot the Hamas leadership racing through the bar of the Four Seasons. Its number-one enmity is clear: Israel. But that might not always be the case. The United States has just posted its first ambassador there since 2005, Robert Ford.

“It’s a tough neighborhood,” admits Asma al-Assad.

It’s also a neighborhood intoxicatingly close to the dawn of civilization, where agriculture began some 10,000 years ago, where the wheel, writing, and musical notation were invented. Out in the desert are the magical remains of Palmyra, Apamea, and Ebla. In the National Museum you see small 4,000-year-old panels inlaid with mother-of-pearl that is echoed in the new mother-of-pearl furniture for sale in the souk. Christian Louboutin comes to buy the damask silk brocade they’ve been making here since the Middle Ages for his shoes and bags, and has incidentally purchased a small palace in Aleppo, which, like Damascus, has been inhabited for more than 5,000 years.

The first lady works out of a small white building in a hilly, modern residential neighborhood called Muhajireen, where houses and apartments are crammed together and neighbors peer and wave from balconies. The first impression of Asma al-Assad is movement–a determined swath cut through space with a flash of red soles. Dark-brown eyes, wavy chin-length brown hair, long neck, an energetic grace. No watch, no jewelry apart from Chanel agates around her neck, not even a wedding ring, but fingernails lacquered a dark blue-green. She’s breezy, conspiratorial, and fun. Her accent is English but not plummy. Despite what must be a killer IQ, she sometimes uses urban shorthand: “I was, like. . . .”

“We did not ask permission beforehand,” Gawker editor John Cook told Mother Jones. “I think it’s important that people are aware of how Vogue and (Editor-in-chief Anna) Wintour…felt about the Assads, and characterized the Assads. It came out almost exactly as the regime embarked on its campaign of murdering women and children…And now in the context of the United States possibly going to war with Syria, it’s important for people to see how the magazine portrayed them…[Wintour] was pushing her people to give cover to a tyrant and murderer.”

Cook continued, “There’s a very important public interest behind publishing [the profile] in a vastly different context than the one it was originally presented in. Our goal was to make sure that the actual artifact is readily available.”

Bashar is not the only Arab leader with a comely, intelligent and media-savvy wife with Western public appeal (London-born Asma studied computer science at King’s College, worked as a banker for J.P. Morgan, and sports European designer clothes).

Spinning the similarities in west-leaning lifestyle and fashion makes for easy “Oprah-fying” of these women which also reflects positively on their men. It’s a tactic borrowed from American and European politics, and it flies both ways (recall Hilary Clinton’s damaging admission that she chose to not stay home and bake cookies, as example).

Was this a factual profile of a contemporary political figure or blatant propaganda to dress up the dictator and his wife into a sanitized, Middle East “lite”? Read the article yourself (link is here) and let us hear your view.

 

 

Chipotle Takes on Big Food in Haunting Commercial, The Scarecrow

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The ScarecrowEerie and beautiful, The Scarecrow is a powerful anti-factory-farming message served up in a new commercial that barely refers to what’s actually being pitched. But the intent is as subtle as a brick to the head: Chipotle Mexican Grill is taking on Big Food.

Tigris River Flotilla Puts Iraq Back in the News

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Iraqi boat buildingOn Sunday, September 15, a fleet of traditional and modern Mesopotamian boats will sail down the Tigris River on an historic voyage of celebration and learning.

Cilantro can clean water

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Cilantro plated with lime

So addicted to technology, we have forgotten that nature has an answer to just about everything – including water purification. Douglas Schauer, a PhD has shown that cilantro – a leafy herb used in Middle East cooking – can clear toxins from contaminated water.

Eschewing the current activated carbon method of water purification, Schauer from Ivy Tech Community College has been working with what he calls biosorbents to clean contaminated water.

Less costly than typical water purification methods, biosorbents are low-cost alternatives such as microbes and plants that are readily available in nature.

While presenting his findings at the 246th National Meeting & Exposition of the American Chemical Society that closed yesterday, Schauer said that cilantro, which is also known as coriander, Chinese or Thai parsley, can remove toxic heavy metals with ease.

“Cilantro may seem too pricey for use in decontaminating large amounts of water for drinking and cooking,” Schauer said.

“However, cilantro grows wild in vast amounts in countries that have problems with heavy-metal water pollution. It is readily available, inexpensive and shows promise in removing certain metals, such as lead, copper and mercury, that can be harmful to human health.”

The structure of the other walls of Cilantro’s microscopic cells have the ideal architecture to absorb heavy metals, Physorg reports. Parsley and culantro have similar properties.

Schauer proposes to pack the cilantro into packets that are similar to tea-bags, or the herb can be packed into water filter cartridges.

With so many people without clean drinking water throughout the Middle East, a dedicated awareness campaign could go a long way to informing them of natural methods of purifying one of our planet’s most necessary and increasingly precious resources.

:: Physorg

Image of cilantro, Shutterstock

Israeli Parliament Plans to be Solar Secure by 2014

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Knesset, Israeli parliament building, rooftop solar, clean tech, green tech, Israel, energy securityYears after the plan was first suggested, the Israeli Parliament building will finally boast a large rooftop solar array that will give the Knesset a sound measure of energy security by 2014.

World’s Biggest 100 MW Geothermal Plant Built by Israel’s Ormat in New Zealand

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ormat geothermal power plant

The New York Stock Exchange-traded company Ormat Technologies (NYSE:ORA) has built what’s being cited as the world’s largest geothermal plant.

For Some Iranians Meatless Monday Isn’t a Choice

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Meatless Mondays, Iran, greenhouse gas emissions, methane, global meat production, U.S. Sanctions,

Meat consumption in Iran has soared by 60 percent since 2005, according to the Omega Research Team (ORT), so the group is trying to convince locals to embrace Meatless Mondays. But for many, meat isn’t a choice.

“Spy” Stork Arrested Then Released and Eaten in Egypt

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white stork, hunting, spy stork, egypt, nature conservation egypt (NCE), wildlife tracking, wildlife conservationA White Stork was arrested in Egypt recently after a fisherman in Qena captured it – believing it to be a spy – and marched it down to local police. Equipped with tracking technology, the bird was released, but didn’t live much longer.

Cyprus Fruit Bats Decline and Head to Turkey?

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fruit bats hanging from a cave Animals the world over are changing where they live as humans effect changes on the land. Beyond the bees (see what this market would look like without bees!), the latest decline to be noticed are fruit bats in Cyprus

Charge Mobile Devices Through the Air

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wi-charge

In a first of a kind device that will help us get rid of the tangle of cords:  an Israeli company company called Wi-Charge says it can power up mobile devices through the air.

Free Beach Wifi to Tel Aviv Tourists and Locals

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tel aviv free wifi

It’s an amazing way to democratize access to information and it means less headaches for tourists who don’t opt in to expensive data plans: the City of Tel Aviv-Jaffa has announced free WiFi hotspots throughout the city. On top of that and its rental bike program Tel-O-Fun, Tel Aviv is becoming a pretty cool city. 

Saudi Ministry of Health Sued Over Death of Obese Man

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Al Dossary Obesity in Saudi ArabiaAn 840 pound Saudi man died last week from complications associated with his weight and his passing is  loudly being mourned online. Is it a sign of our digital times or a new awareness of the obesity epidemic in the Middle East?

Zaha Hadid Greens Tokyo’s 2020 Olympic Stadium Design

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Tokyo National Olympic Stadium, Zaha Hadid, grey water recycling, geothermal, clean tech, green design, 2020 Olympic Games, rainwater cooling system, 2019 Rugby World Cup

Japan has won the bid to host the 2020 Olympic Games in Tokyo and Zaha Hadid has been picked to retrofit its National Stadium. First designed for the 1964 Summer Games, this new stadium boasts a few green credentials.

Iraqi architect Zaha Hadid has never shown a great deal of interest in designing healthy green buildings, but she has incorporated a few meaningful eco features in her design for what will become the Tokyo National Olympic Stadium.

Tokyo National Olympic Stadium, Zaha Hadid, grey water recycling, geothermal, clean tech, green design, 2020 Olympic Games, rainwater cooling system, 2019 Rugby World Cup

In addition to using geothermal energy, the new building will be cooled using recycled rainwater. Additionally, the stadium’s grey water will be reused – either for plumbing or landscaping. As yet, there has been little mention of what kind of materials will be used for construction or where they will be sourced, but at least Zaha is making some kind of effort to soften her enormous ecological footprint.

The Sports Council is enamored with Hadid’s design – despite complaints that her Aquatic Center built for the London Games was so large that the spectators may as well have watched swimming events at home, so invisible were the athletes from the seats.

Tokyo National Olympic Stadium, Zaha Hadid, grey water recycling, geothermal, clean tech, green design, 2020 Olympic Games, rainwater cooling system, 2019 Rugby World Cup

Equipped with a sliding roof, the Tokyo National Olympic Stadium has a flexible design that will ensure that the building will not be obsolete when the international sporting event comes to a close. Indeed, this is part of the reason the judges chose her brief above ten other competitors.

They noted, according to Atlantic Cities, its “innovative and fluid design that expresses a sense of dynamism appropriate for sporting activities.”

Tokyo National Olympic Stadium, Zaha Hadid, grey water recycling, geothermal, clean tech, green design, 2020 Olympic Games, rainwater cooling system, 2019 Rugby World Cup

In addition to serving the Olympic Games, the stadium should be ready in time for the 2019 Rugby World Cup.

Zaha Hadid’s studio has been cleaning up with design competitions of late – even adding a touch of star power to the controversial 2022 World Cup in Qatar.

MIT Fog Harvesting Material Yields 5x More H20

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Dubai, fog, MIT fog harvester, water scarcity, desalination, water from air, green tech, clean tech

Gulf countries like Abu Dhabi may lack freshwater resources, but they also have a lot of humidity. MIT’s new super efficient fog harvesting material could help countries with climates like this capture that moisture for drinking water.