Mudawanat: All About Blogging

I’m on Youtube! I was invited to speak at ictQatar’s Mudawanat conference earlier this month on a panel of expert bloggers.

Though Arabic is the world’s fifth most widely spoken language, Arabic speakers represent less than 3% of all web users, according to Internet World Stats. The purpose of this conference, which was held in English and Arabic, was to nurture interest in blogging in Qatar and across the region. Read more about the day’s events at The National.

I was humbled to speak on a panel of such high-caliber bloggers. The point I tried to get across was that you don’t have to have a lot of free time or be famous or special to blog. You just need to have something of value to say and be willing to share it.

Enjoy my small contribution, and please ignore the drooping mic!

Shades of Doha: A Vibrant Mini-Series

BY SHABINA S. KHATRI
WWW.KHALEEJESQUE.COM

When it comes to explaining Qatar to people who don’t live here, I am often at a loss. How to convey a country’s essence – its chaotic blend of traditions, cultures, faiths and food – to someone who has not experienced any of these sights, sounds and tastes firsthand? It is not an easy task.

Enter Shades of Doha. The series of documentary-style short films featuring familiar characters around Doha, including a street barber and a bread maker, was first created by journalist and British expat Omar Khalifa. Recently, he developed Shades into a mini-series for Qatar’s National Day.

What can Shades tell us about Qatar, and our place here?

I recently put that question and others to Khalifa, the 28-year-old director/producer. Read on to learn more about the series and Khalifa’s next film project, as well as his advice on staying true to one’s self and beating the #1 expat complaint in Doha – its infamous loneliness.

Khaleejesque Team: How did you get tied up with National Day?
Omar Khalifa: I was called by a producer friend of mine who said that somebody he knew liked the short films I had been making and wanted to meet me. Open, keen and blind-happy to the opportunity, I said yes. After meeting the guy – the creative director for the National Day programme – in a rather stately-looking building, he asked me if I’d like to make some more of my Shades of Doha series for the month-long channel dedicated to the forthcoming National Day. I jumped at the chance, formally agreed, and left the meeting wondering exactly who, indeed, I’d been talking to. As it happens, it was Peter Webber, the Acadamy Award-nominated director for Girl with a Pearl Earring, which gave me even more of a kick.

KT: What is your official role?
OK: I am the director of Shades of Doha. But I was also the cameraman, and bit-part editor. I had a producer and editor on board, but otherwise it was quite an intimate little project, the way I’d always envisioned it.

KT: What is Shades of Doha? How does the series relate to National Day and Qatar?
OK: A vibrant documentary-style mini-series, Shades of Doha gets to know the people and places that make Qatar what it is today. From the legendary medicine man to the famed falafel-maker, and the Bedouin camel saddler to the illustrious oud player, Shades of Doha paints a colourful first-person portrait of the country’s characters. Shades was borne out of a desire to celebrate the unique cosmopolitanism and diversity that Qatar heralds and will reflect during its National Day on December 18th.

KT: Which is your favorite?
OK: My favourite is the medicine man. We turned up at closing time, he didn’t seem to like us much, and he looked a little down. But we chatted with him off-camera for an hour about life’s mysterious ways, and he warmed to us. Eventually he agreed to let us shoot, and I made sure we were recording within 20 seconds before he changed his mind!

KT: Has working on QND changed the way you look at Qatar at all? Have you learned anything new about this place?
OK: Getting my hands on the QND vision has given me an insight into what Qataris enjoy about their nationality; about their statehood and how they see themselves. Over the course of the shoot, I learnt a lot about Qatar’s recent tribal history, and its race to modernity. The Shades were effectively based on well-celebrated Qatari people and institutions too, so I got to hone in on where the locals spend their time. I had a lot of chai with some fantastic characters.

KT: What is your future vision for the project/series?
OK: I think it’s time to put the Shades project to bed! From the initial Shades I made before National Day, to the ones neatly wrapped in the last week, it’s probably about time to goodnight them. I’ve got a house-sized list of other projects to finish! I’ve shot 16 Shades in total – some for myself as a way to learn filmmaking techniques and develop my own style, and some for the National Day project. Two – the fish seller and shisha man – will forever remain unfinished.

Sometimes a series-based film project can get saturated, not only in your approach, based on the amount of time you’ve simply spent with it, but because when more factors are added to the equation – people, different equipment etc – the art can lose its original resonance, and filmmaking starts to become less appetising. The Shades for QND, I would say, are vastly different to the Shades I made originally. The concept, direction and focus changed, which felt more like a loss than a gain at the time of delivery.

Ultimately, I wasn’t making them for me anymore. But that was also the challenge. There is a buzz about making TV and filmmaking, for me, is as much about creating visual art as it is project management. If you can marry the two, your production will run smoothly and your product will be a winner. I felt immensely proud to be on the QND project, there are some fantastic people involved in its production and I hope to work with them in the future.

KT: Any hints on your next project?
OK: Making films in Doha has made me want to open an independent cinema here. Fans of world cinema, who want to watch a film en francais one Friday with a latte on a comfortable sofa – I want to give them that place. In terms of film projects, I have a music video to shoot, I’ve got a few short films I want to make and I want to start pushing the boundaries of *DSLR cinematography. These things are incredibly powerful now. I’d recommend any aspiring filmmaker to get one. (*Digital SLR cameras are a hybrid between digital still cameras and high-definition video cameras. They allow you to achieve cinematic shallow depth of field and expressive cinematography at relatively low prices (www.dslr-cinematography.com)

KT: Qatar can be a lonely, isolating place for expats. Any advice to people on getting out there and enjoying themselves?
OK: As an expat myself, I’ve been through all the emotions, just like anyone else. The best thing to do is always have a holiday ahead of you when you come back from the last one, even if it’s a little break to Dubai, Abu Dhabi or Bahrain. Frankly, this can apply to anyone anywhere – I’d say this to someone running aground in London too. Doha’s investing in its tourism sector heavily, so in the next five years, there’ll be a bag of things to do. For now, my favourite place is a simple, green, open place – Aspire Park behind Hyatt Plaza. There, you could be anywhere.

Get to know more about Shades of Doha by checking out the site here.

Qatar: Critiques bristle; calls to shut down popular online forum

BY SHABINA S. KHATRI
GLOBAL VOICES ONLINE

Fed up with criticism of their culture and people, Qataris have begun organizing a campaign to shut down Qatar Living, the country’s most popular online forum.

A recent series of Qatar-bashing posts on QL have fueled the outcry and prompted college student Amal to start a Facebook group called anti-qatarliving.com on Sunday. The description reads:

This group is to protest against a website called qatarliving.com where many expatriates who live in Qatar post long threads where they criticize the Qatari citizens and culture using very rude and vulgar vocabulary.

Many of the expatriates on this website (not all of them but most of them) use bad language when talking about Qatari people. They have called us names such as pigs, uncivilized, racist barbarians, and many other hideous names. They say that we cannot survive without them and that we cannot handle or manage our country. They also say that they are the ones who built our country fo us and the ones who are teaching us how to behave like humans.

Our aim is to have this website closed for good and teach whoever is attacking our Qatari identity that Qataris should not be underestimated and underrated and we want all of them to see how vicious we are whenever anyone goes beyond their limits while talking about Qatar.

These people have no appreciation of what this country has given them and we will not let them get away with all of this.

Over the past week, various threads on Qatar Living contained scathing critiques of the country’s people and culture. One such thread, which has been removed by QL moderators, included a rant by commenter PM, who was upset by the rowdy behavior of some local teens on Qatar National Day (Friday).

PM’s post angered many locals, who called on advertisers to pull their support of QL.

According to local newspaper The Peninsula:

Some remarks against the festivities and the people of Qatar as well as Asian expatriates were in bad taste and smack of racism, said Mohamed Al Jufairi, a civil engineer.

Al Jufairi said he has received American education right from school to university levels and know what constructive criticism is. “But the comments about Qatari nationals and National Day are really humiliating.”

“We are all for freedom of expression but that does not mean you cross boundaries and heap insults on us,” he said.

Remarks that all Qataris are arrogant and egoists are not correct since a large number of them are simple-minded and good people. “Some of us may be bad but to say that all of us are arrogant cannot be true.”

In another QL thread, posted two Decembers ago but resurrected by commenters on Sunday, a disgruntled Canadian woman lists all the reasons “Qatar sucks,” including the weather and “lack of culture.”

gabaee writes:

And finally my biggest problam about Qatar is how they allow all these labours to come and work here like dogs. They should at least be allowed to bring their wives here with them, so that they dont’ ****** stare at women like hungry animals. They disgust me and I find them subhuman in the way they act towards non-Qatari women. While I don’t cover up like the Qatari women, I dress very conservatively with loose cloths and don’t show any skin while outside. Nevertheless, I have been made feel sooo uncomfortable and harressed by sick words, sounds, and animal-like stares. It’s sickening and infuriating.

So my advice to those females out there who have a good active life back in the homeland, with a good family and a good man, DO NOT even consider the idea of moving to Qatar. It’s BORING, DISAPPOINTING and DISGUSTING!

The post prompted dozens of responses, many of them from expats defending Qatar and its people.

Commenter Gypsy said:

I have to agree that Qatar is a difficult place for a single gal, and I think they should allow labourers to bring their wives,however I disagree with the rest. I know lots of nice Qataris, and I think the architecture here is pretty neat. Much cooler then anything being built in Canada at the moment.

mx1o0o said:

I have been here for 20 years …Im proud to live here all my life, and will always be proud, even though its not my home country, but Qatar and My home country are one in my heart. We are visitors here. We respect Qatar, those who don’t, know where the airport is…

On another QL thread,

genesis said:

I think this is blown out of proportion .This is not about Qatarlivning! QL is a site where both locals & expatriates share useful information about Qatar.In addition to organizing many community services throughout the years. The ND thread was deleted by MODs, Many have expressed their nonacceptance on what’s written already In Local internet forums like Qatarshares , many locals also criticized the unfortunate behavior of many during the night parade. I do agree with you that many comments by posters were racial , but it only shows complete ignorance of certain individuals Demand to block the site & then what? People will always find a way or another to vent. Only with understanding of one another can we overcome this clash of cultures.

In a post on the Peninsula article regarding Qatar Living,

Qatar Visitor, a website for expats, writes:

The article and the attack were not really fair on QatarLiving.com, especially as they had both promoted the event themselves and removed the offending comments – I personally can’t see what else they be expected to do! …Qatar Living has been a huge success, not just for the website owner but also for Qatar. The website demonstrates that, online at least, Qatar has a measure of freedom of speech. (A measure, because, as the removal of comments show, Qatar Living, like all of us, practises self-censorship…What’s more, it’s Qatar’s number one English language social networking site…With Qatar and ICT pouring money and effort into developing IT and the internet in Qatar, Qatar Living is unlikely to be closed down any time soon. But the website does need to be careful!

On Twitter, there was little support for shutting down QL.

Qatari hndqtr said:

the hell is wrong with them, we’ll everybody just let it go!!

Expat VEE6 said:

Sad and small minded individuals.

Amal, founder of the anti-QL Facebook group, which already has 91 members, stressed that her campaign was not against all of Qatar’s expats.

She writes on the group’s wall:

I want to make sure that everybody knows that were are not against expatriates at all. We are very aware that many people who live and work in Qatar are largely contributing to our country’s development. Many of these people are as well our teachers and instructors whom we hold a great amount of respect for. However, the people we are addressing by this protest are the ones who constantly use bad language when talking about Qataris. We are addressing the ones who act as if they like us and are inspired by our culture in front of our faces go talk about us behind our backs calling us retards and uncivilized. We do not want expatriates to leave the country, but we surly demand respect and will never accept being described as savages. Now for those who are not willing to be appreciative of all the benefits they are getting by working in Qatar, they surly are not welcomed to stay in Qatar.

Also on the wall was a plea for peace and an invitation to Qataris to join QL.

Amerah Egab said:

I do hope many of you do read the comments where many of the QL community would like to see more Qataris join us and become active members of this community, there are tens of thousands of members, a couple of loud mouth idiots do not represent us all.

On Monday, a few threads apologizing to the Qatari people were posted on QL. Those who run the site issued an official comment in the afternoon.

Ahmad said:

Over the last few days it seems that instead of facilitating discussions and conversations, Qatar Living has become the conversation.

We just want to point out that Qatar Living is not for or against anyone. It is a website dedicated to helping people make the most out of living in Qatar. From finding the best restaurants to selling you car, from helping people volunteer to organizing social events, Qatar Living is designed to be a place where everyone can feel comfortable and welcome.

Of course, with over 150,000 members and 500,000 people visiting each month, there are bound to be disagreements. And unfortunately, like everywhere on the internet, there are bound to be a small number of people who make comments that are offensive. It is unfair for these comments to generalize and stereotype people.

In the same manner, the objectionable comments by a number of individuals should not be seen as indicative of most of the Qatari’s and Expatriates who make up the Qatar Living community. We use our Community Guidelines to clearly indicate what is acceptable on our website. We do apologise if any users have fallen short of these guidelines – we aim to treat every member of this community with respect and dignity.

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