Search
 






Home


About


News


Programmes


Fields


Resources


Donate




  You are here: Home News Articles Marwan Abado launches Middle East tour for UNRWA



Print Page


Email Page




News



Press Releases






Articles






Official Statements






Emergency Reports







Latest News




UNRWA students in Syria continue education despite violence







UNRWA health programme hard hit in Syria but the UN agency's work is having an impact







Finland announces additional EUR 1.5 million to UNRWA







Run or walk for the children of Gaza in Washington, DC






Marwan Abado launches Middle East tour for UNRWA


Tags: Lebanon | Mar Elias | UNRWA@60

14 May 2010
Mar Elias, Lebanon

He’s the one who fled his home during the Nakba and left, a kerosene lamp
The one he finds in the refugee camp is missing, a wick and fuel
His wife fares no better, with only dreams for a set of china, but then she has plenty of dreams
He’s the one, him and only him
He’s the only who built a house anew, to find bombs falling on the roof again
So then he finds himself in the tent anew, a tent that could be moved by the wind.

Marwan Abado chose to begin his press conference at the Al Kabri School in the Mar Elias Refugee Camp with this poem, by way of introducing his forthcoming concerts in Lebanon (including Beirut and Sidon). Abado’s visit to the country comes as a part of a three-leg tour of the region, which also takes in Syria and Jordan. Abado then expressed his hope that he would see the day when his poem would have little relevance to the daily lives of Palestinians.

Abado spoke also of the personal commitment he felt to this latest tour, which comes in the effort to raise funds for scholarships for Palestinian students. He reminisced about how his parents had instilled in him the idea that “education is a tool”, and spoke of his anguish that the Palestinians in Lebanon today had neglected to use that tool. Abado spoke of the need to support the educational work which UNRWA carried out in the three countries included in his visit as education is, in his words, “the way for us to overcome our self-victimisation; as harsh as fate has been to us, we need to overcome it.”

Abado, who was born in a Palestinian refugee camp in Lebanon and describes himself as “integrally Palestinian, Lebanese and Austrian”, gave meaning to the title of his tour by saying that “Palestine remains my melody throughout”. Although nostalgic for life in the camps, he emphasised the need for camps, in order to better appreciate them from the outside, and from there think of the return to Palestine. Abado expressed the hope that through his music, he was best placed to serve the greatest number of people in Lebanon, Jordan and Syria.

After the press conference, Marwan Abado walked through the streets of the Mar Elias camp, which he had left once and had hoped to return to.

Together with another four Austrian musicians, Abado will play two concerts in Lebanon as part of his “Palestine Remains My Melody” tour. Dates below:

Beirut, 22 May: UNESCO Palace
Sidon, 21 May: Rafiq Hariri High School

Proceeds go to funding scholarships for Palestine refugee students in Lebanon.
 









How you can help




Donate $40

and we could pay a doctor for a day






Related Publications
Reform of UNRWA Health Programme in Lebanon
Relief and recovery support for displaced Palestine refugees from Nahr el-Bared camp
Reconstruction of Nahr el-Bared Camp and UNRWA Compound
Fields of operation map
Restoring Dignity executive summary
All




Related Photos

Site Images

Picking up the pieces





© United Nations Relief and
    Works Agency for Palestine Refugees


Jobs


Sitemap


Tribunal


Links


Donors


Partners


Procurement


Privacy


Contact

Site By InterTech
Join us online