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7 films in package
Amo
Amo is a short cinema-verite inspired documentary film about a Syrian grocer in Downtown Brooklyn, shot on 16mm.
A Thousand And One Journeys: The Arab Americans
The film explores 200 years of Arab American contributions through interviews and weaving historical context. It celebrates the American immigrant heritage and those who came to America from The Levant, North African and The Arabian Peninsula
Cedars in the Pines: History of the Lebanese in North Carolina
A narrative describing the 130-year history of Lebanese immigration to North Carolina.
Beirut on the Bayou
Lebanese writer Raif Shwayri travels to Louisiana to trace the life of his grandfather, who worked as a peddler serving Cajun communities along Bayou Lafourche in the early 1900s. What begins as a personal quest to fill in missing family history becomes a window into the rarely told story of early Arab-American immigrants and their unlikely role in building a nation. The film features never-before-seen 16mm archival footage from the 1950s and an original Arabic score featuring a cover of the Cajun classic "La Danse De Mardi Gras."
Tales from Arab Detroit
Tales from Arab Detroit is a documentary offering a fascinating glimpse into the lives and struggles of the Arab American community in the Detroit tri-county area.
Coming Home
COMING HOME follows Freedom Dabka Group, a collective of Palestinian-American dancers, living in Bay Ridge (Brooklyn) who use Dabka as a way to connect to their community and homeland.
Discussion with Abe Kasbo, director of A Thousand And One Journeys: The Arab Americans, and curator Nanor Vosgueritchian
Pay What You CanAfter this content becomes available April 23rd at 11:00 pm UTC, you'll have 4 days to start watching. Once you begin, you'll have 4 days to finish watching. Need help?

Tales from Arab Detroit (1995)

Tales From Arab Detroit is an intimate community portrait of American-born children of Arab immigrant parents and the ways that traditions migrate and transform. Performances by an Egyptian storyteller provoke a discussion on cultural change within the Detroit Arab community. Through music, poetry and the ironies of everyday life, young people narrate and navigate their parents expectations, and the impact of racial discrimination just a few years before 9/ll. "An absolutely splendid film, a sensitive, elegantly edited gem… we laughed and cried simultaneously." - Naomi Shihab Nye



About the Filmmaker

Joan Mandell is a journalist, oral historian and documentary filmmaker. She currently divides her time between Washington, DC, where she teaches at Georgetown’s Center for Contemporary Arab Studies, and Detroit, where she is a beekeeper, and worked for many years with the Arab American National Museum. She has also taught at the University of California-Irvine, College for Creative Studies (Detroit) and Birzeit University (Palestine). She served for two decades on the editorial board of MERIP Middle East Report, and was a founding editor of the Jerusalem-based Al-Fajr English language newsweekly. She is co-director of "Gaza Ghetto: Portrait of a Palestinian Family", considered the first feature documentary produced in Gaza.

  • Year
    1995
  • Runtime
    45 minutes
  • Language
    English, Arabic
  • Subtitle Language
    English
  • Director
    Joan Mandell
  • Screenwriter
    Joan Mandell
  • Co-Producer
    Sally Howell
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