#mediator

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Portrait Adel Sharbati Abu Shaher, a social community judge and mediator in East Jerusalem, in his h

Portrait Adel Sharbati Abu Shaher, a social community judge and mediator in East Jerusalem, in his home in Wadi al-Joz, on March 30, 2016. Abu Shaher solves a lot of problems between families and resolves social and neighborhood conflicts within the Arab Palestinian society in Israel, and in particular in East Jerusalem. He has received the Yakir Jerusalem, Citizenship prize from the Municipality of Jerusalem, among other honorary awards. Photo by Hadas Parush/Flash90


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“This is why you should be your own cat. Like it or not, you have a different ancestry from mo

“This is why you should be your own cat. Like it or not, you have a different ancestry from most of the other young cats in SkyClan. The way of the warrior is not the only way, and you should be grateful for the chance to see that. There’s more to life than fighting and showing yourself off as a strong cat. It’s not always about who is the biggest and bravest.” — Tree


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spencyart:I thought she was very pretty so I drew herINFP, anyone?spencyart:I thought she was very pretty so I drew herINFP, anyone?

spencyart:

I thought she was very pretty so I drew her

INFP, anyone?


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Credit:George McCalman

Ralph Bunche was a man of many firsts. He was the first African-American valedictorian at UCLA. The first African-American in the country to receive a Ph.D. in political science. And the first African-American to win the Nobel Peace Prize. Bunche is considered the “Father of Peacekeeping” for negotiating an end to the first Arab-Israeli war while working at the United Nations.

In 1949, Bunche stood in his hotel room on the Greek island of Rhodes with members of the Israeli delegation and the Egyptian delegation. These were two groups of people, in a room together, that hadn’t been able to reach a resolution over the control of Palestine in more than 30 years. Now, in the midst of the first Arab-Israeli war, Bunche had been sent by the United Nations to end the conflict. He knew it wouldn’t be easy, but was determined to find a resolution.

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Ralph J. Bunche shaking hands with Louise Ridgle White, future Los Angeles Assemblywoman candidate. Credit: Rolland J. Curtis, Rolland J. Curtis Collection of Negatives and Photographs/Los Angeles Public Library

How did Bunche crack the code on making peace? To understand his impact, we have to rewind a bit. Born to humble beginnings in Detroit, Michigan, Bunche was raised by his grandmother after his parents passed away. Early on, it was clear he was someone to watch. In high school, he was known as an expert debater and was named his class valedictorian. In 1923, he enrolled at UCLA, supporting himself with an athletic scholarship and a janitorial job. Bunche graduated in 1927, with a degree in international relations, and was once again the class valedictorian.

His graduation speech revealed glimpses of the career he would have as a peacemaker: “The future peace and harmony of the world are contingent upon the ability, yours and mine, to affect a remedy.”

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Ralph J. Bunche, UCLA portrait. June 1927.
Credit: UCLA Library Special Collections, Charles E. Young Research Library

There was no stopping him. He went on to Harvard for graduate studies in political science, and from there he taught at both Howard and Harvard. While at Howard, he became one of the leaders of a group of Black intellectuals known as the “Young Turks.” The Young Turks’ perspective on race set them apart. They argued that issues of “class, not race” were key to solving the so-called “Negro problem.” This line of thinking was later adopted by the civil rights activists of the 1960s, including Martin Luther King, Jr.

In a shift away from the world of academia, he joined the U.S. State Department as an advisor on the future of colonial territories in 1944. Two years later, Bunche was at the U.N. From June of 1947 to August of 1949, he worked on the assignment that would serve as a defining moment in his history and the world’s: the confrontation between Arabs and Jews in Palestine.

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Acting U.N. mediator, Ralph J. Bunche, in Palestine, 1948.
Credit: UC Library: A Centenary Celebration of Ralph J. Bunche

In 1949, peacekeeping was a very new concept and Bunche was determined to show that it wasn’t just a fad adopted by the U.N. – he wanted to prove it had long-lasting power. While he stood in his bedroom in Rhodes, with members of both the Israeli delegation and the Egyptian delegation, he revealed two sets of memorial plates bearing the name of each negotiator. He told the negotiators that once they signed the armistice agreement, they’d each get one of the plates as a souvenir. But if they didn’t reach an agreement, he’d break the plates over their heads. He was met with laughter from both sides, but ultimately his plan worked – they signed the agreement.

Ralph Bunche speaks on world peace at the meeting of American Association for the United Nations in Los Angeles, 1951. Credit: CriticalPast 

His achievement in reaching the 1949 armistice agreement was the reason he received the Nobel Peace Prize a year later. Though they were original, the plates weren’t his secret ingredient for peacekeeping. Bunche believed there was no human problem that couldn’t be eventually be solved. He had great empathy and was interested in improving the lives of ordinary people. According to Sir Brian Urquhart, former Undersecretary General at the U.N. and one of Bunche’s colleagues, Bunche was an incredibly good listener. All these traits, along with his own unique creativity and humor, truly made him the Father of Peacekeeping, and his pioneering methods are still used by the U.N. today.

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Ralph J. Bunche and Charles E. Young in front of Bunche Hall, UCLA 1969.
Credit: UC Library: A Centenary Celebration of Ralph J. Bunche

Kampfar Dolk Live in London 2014 www.hastemalaise.com Thanks to Dolk for his faith in me x x x 

Kampfar

Dolk

Live in London 2014

www.hastemalaise.com

Thanks to Dolk for his faith in me x x x 


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Kampfar Dolk Live in London 2014 www.hastemalaise.com Thanks to Dolk for his faith in me x x x 

Kampfar

Dolk

Live in London 2014

www.hastemalaise.com

Thanks to Dolk for his faith in me x x x 


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Kampfar Dolk Live in London 2014 www.hastemalaise.com Thanks to Dolk for his faith in me x x x 

Kampfar

Dolk

Live in London 2014

www.hastemalaise.com

Thanks to Dolk for his faith in me x x x 


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Skull Fist Live in London 2014Copyright NX 2014 please do not use this without permission.www.hastem

Skull Fist

Live in London 2014

Copyright NX 2014 please do not use this without permission.

www.hastemalaise.com


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Skull Fist Live in London 2014Copyright NX 2014 please do not use this without permission.www.hastem

Skull Fist

Live in London 2014

Copyright NX 2014 please do not use this without permission.

www.hastemalaise.com


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VanderbuystWillem Live in London 2014Copyright NX 2014 please do not use this without permission.www

Vanderbuyst

Willem 

Live in London 2014

Copyright NX 2014 please do not use this without permission.

www.hastemalaise.com


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“ Tears of heaven, sea of lifeSadness dealer, bring me the night ” K.F.R ( music and lyr

“ Tears of heaven, sea of life
Sadness dealer, bring me the night ” K.F.R ( music and lyrics by Maxime )

Portrait of Maxime Taccardi.

I love to combine the art with the artist so when I asked Maxime to paint on his own flesh…..he put his trust in my vision and created this ritual painting on his skin.

Photo taken in London 2014.

Thanks to Maxime and Kristyn. x

This image is copyright NX 2014 please do not use without permission. 

www.hastemalaise.com


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ShiningKvarforthLondon December 2013 This photo is copyright NX 2013 please do not use without per

Shining

Kvarforth

London December 2013 

This photo is copyright NX 2013 please do not use without permission. 

www.hastemalaise.com

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Shining Thanks to Huss xLondon December 2013Copyright NX 2013 please don’t reproduce this with

Shining 

Thanks to Huss x

London December 2013

Copyright NX 2013 please don’t reproduce this without permission.

www.hastemalaise.com


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“ You always create miracles ” thanks to Huss for the kind words………

“ You always create miracles ” thanks to Huss for the kind words………x

Shining 

Kvarforth

London December 2013 

This photo is copyright NX 2013 please do not use without permission. 

www.hastemalaise.com


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Shining Thanks to Huss xLondon December 2013Copyright NX 2013 please don’t reproduce this with

Shining 

Thanks to Huss x

London December 2013

Copyright NX 2013 please don’t reproduce this without permission.

www.hastemalaise.com


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