Showing posts with label library. Show all posts
Showing posts with label library. Show all posts

Thursday, May 31, 2018

WorldTowning Supports the Fez Medina Children's Library


WorldTowning™ – Living the world, one hometown at a time - is the vision of some remarkable people - parents, Jessica and Will, along with their children Largo and Avalon. They explain their WorldTowning project as "a slow-traveling way of life for the curious and adventuresome, for lovers of the world, for those who desire to experience life to the fullest". Along the way they have given wonderful support to the Fez Medina Children's Library

Recently they spent several weeks in Morocco and described it as one of the highlights of their three year adventure which has seen them visit 18 countries. Along the way the family has recorded an entertaining and informative video blog.

Arriving in Fez they came across the Medina Children's Library in the old Medina of Fez. Inspired, they volunteered to take part in some of the library activities. They then decided to raise some funds to assist the library.
"The library has a remarkable group of individuals who cared about the future of Fez so much that they created this special space. But this space can only exist with the support of generous individuals like yourself to buy books, pay for the rent, utilities, and the salaries of the librarians.
If you have the ability to provide a donation it would greatly be appreciated. Each contribution directly benefits a child and their future by way of books.
Thank you from the bottom of our hearts!" - Jessica, Will, Largo and Avalon
The Medina Children’s Library was established to encourage literacy and a love of reading in the children of the Fez Medina community.
The library was started in January 2015 by a group of neighbors living in the Fez Medina. We wanted to offer the children in our community a place where they could discover books and develop a love of reading. This is the only children’s library in Fez.
In 2017 the library had record attendance with 14,700 visits to the library, over 1,200 each month! There is a huge need here and it is thrilling to see the ongoing enthusiastic response from the kids.


Jesica and Will have set up a "Causevox" site to collect donations. To date it has exceeded their goal, not in one week, but in one day!

Please click on this link to donate.

The library and The View From Fez would like to thank the WorldTowning team for their wonderful support.

Jessica
Will
Avalon
Largo

Visit the Medina Children's Library Facebook page
The library website is here

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Friday, October 27, 2017

Sunday Open House at Fez Medina Children's Library

You are invited to visit the Medina Children's Library in Fez at the Open House this Sunday, October 29 from 4 - 6 pm. Come and meet the local children, their parents, and the librarians who make this such a vibrant and fun little space


The Medina Children's Library has been open since January 2015, and since then children have made many thousands of visits to what has become a treasured community facility.

The local children are proud of their library, which is the only one for young people in Fez. On Sunday they will entertain their parents and visitors with story readings, songs, dances, and a short play. All the children who attend will receive a certificate of participation.

So if you are in Fez, please drop into the Medina Children's Library and share what promises to be an enjoyable celebration. We are at 41bis Swiqt ben Safi, Zkak Rouah, just off the Talaa Sghira. You can find us on Google Maps and Trip Advisor. 

If you aren't in Fez, and would like to know more about the Library and to offer your support, please see our website. CLICK HERE. 



Photos by Samia Bachraoui

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Thursday, March 23, 2017

Writers Assist the Medina Children's Library


This week the Medina Children's Library received a generous donation from the participants in this year's Deep Travel Writing Workshop


The View from Fez headquarters at Riad Zany was the venue for the fundraising dinner on Wednesday night. Among the 25 guests were Deep Travel organisers, Christina Ammon and Anna Elkins, photographer, Omar Chennafi, and renowned travel writer, Tim Cahill.


The evening included the launch of a superb new anthology and readings from writers represented in the book, Vignettes & Postcards From Morocco, edited by Erin Byrne. Erin was unable to attend this years workshops but was present as a cardboard cut out of her face!

Suzanna Clarke, Christina Ammon, ( rin Byrne), Tim Cahill, Sandy McCutcheon, Anna Elkins

The feast, cooked up by Rachida El Jokh and her mother, included salads, lamb with apricots, chicken with preserved lemon and a kiwifruit, mint and strawberry yogurt dessert - delicious.


The money raised goes towards supporting the Medina Children's Library, which provides a child-friendly space with hundreds of books, storytelling and art workshops and receives a thousand visits from Medina children every month.

Our thanks to organiser and chef, Rachida El Jokh


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Sunday, December 18, 2016

Milestone for Fez Medina Children's Library



In January the Medina Children's Library will be two years old. In that time, more than 25,000 visits will have been made by local children to the small space off one of the main streets in the Fez Medina. It's the only children's library in the whole city. To keep the doors open, the Library is seeking donations.

Samia Bachroui, 23, has been working as a librarian for the past year.  She says, "I've seen the improvement in the children." Many visit regularly and Samia says, "their level of expression is better now."

Librarian Samia Bachroui reads to a visiting school group

The Library was founded in January 2014 by a group of friends who live in the Fez Medina, to encourage a love of reading among local children. It has books in Arabic, French and some in English. It is a non-profit association and depends entirely on private donations to cover the costs of books, librarian staffing, rent, and operating expenses.

One of the regular library users is Sabrine, who is 11 years old. "The Medina Children's Library is the first library I have ever been in. It is in my neighbourhood, so it is easy for me to be there every day. This library made me love reading and discover a lot of useful books."


The library holds regular story time activities, hosts visits from school classes, holds occasional craft workshops, and runs excursions to significant sites in the Fez medina, so local children can further discover the heritage of their ancient city.

Kawtar, who is 7 years old, visits the Library every day. "The library is my special place," she says. "I like to go to there because there are a lot of books that I like and a lot of activities like story time."

Samia has a BA in English Literature. She says, "When I was a child there was no opportunity to read books...The (Medina Children's) Library is very important to the local community. The children love the Library and the books we have. Parents trust us - when they send their child to the Library, they feel they are in a safe world."

The View From Fez is a sponsor of the Medina Children's Library, and encourages donations to this worthwhile cause. 100% of donations will go towards the Library. To make a donation via PayPal, please visit the Medina Children's Library website. CLICK HERE.



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Wednesday, July 20, 2016

Talent Show in Fez

The American Language Center in Fez is holding a special event on Sunday, July 24th, to collect books for children in two centres in Fez.  They need books in English, French and Arabic


You can help by coming along to the ALC Fes Talent show - price of admission is a book!

The Amazing Talent Show and Book Drive will take place at 6 PM in the garden of the ALIF Villa Residence, 28 Rue Mohammed Diouri, across from the ALC.

Your book contribution will assist  in building libraries for the Girls' Centre in Ziat and the Boys' Centre in Batha.


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Sunday, April 24, 2016

Earth Day in Fez - Photo Essay


E a r t h  D a y

Earth Day in Fez was celebrated by a group of thirty children from around the Fez Medina. They came together to participate in a drawing and art workshop to express their personal feelings about the environment. The project was funded by the ALC/ALIF Environment Club


The workshop was coordinated by Omar Chennafi with artistic direction from Australian textile/installation artist Kim Simon. She was assisted by Mitch O'Sullivan and New Zealanders Georgia Bartlett and Katy Hassall.

The aspiring artists are given guidance by members of the ALIF/ALC Environment Club
Australian artist Kim Simon
New Zealand artist, Katy Hassall, gives a helping hand
Local children of all ages joined in

Children from the Fez Medina Children's Library also took part with two of the librarians coming along to assist the children.

After their works of art were completed the children were delighted by the notion of turning their work in to a "planet" to hang in their rooms or on neighbourhood trees.

The Fez Medina Children's Library librarians were happy to help
New Zealander, Georgia Bartlett, displays a young girl's work
"Clean water, clean air and a happy home - the perfect environment "says Salahadeen
"Just like the earth" - the drawings are transformed
"All my own work for Earth Day"
Hanging the finished work
A great Earth Day for the Medina kids
The artists celebrate a great Earth Day 2016


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Tuesday, April 05, 2016

Tangier - Stingy in Promoting Children's Reading


The Tangier local Urban Council is being criticised for its stingy support of a children's reading project. Having provided support of several million dirhams to associations and sports clubs, the urban district of Tangier has offered a donation of only 500 dirhams (50 USD) for the promotion of a children's reading project

The idea for this project came from a 17-year-old old high school student, Amal Mazouri, and his uncle, Youssef Sarhani. The aim of the initiative is to make the rounds of public schools from Tangier to encourage young students to experience the joys of reading.

The Arabic-language daily Al Massae reported Youssef Sarhani saying: "The initial idea was to organise a small reading festival for the benefit of a few dozen public school students. The stories could then help schoolchildren to enrich their imagination and push them to read more and more bilingual books in Arabic and French".

After several refusals of support for the project, including from a Moroccan association, who complained that the initiative was "unclear",  the French Institute of Tangier came to the rescue, accepted the proposal and agreed to present it in its premises.


Following this agreement Youssef Amal and Mazouri Sarhani decided to present their programme within an open space at the library in Tangier with financial support from the French Institute and its infrastructure, including audiovisual equipment and one hundred children's stories in French.

The organisers of the event also wanted to provide school children books and stories in Arabic, So Youssef Serhani headed to the urban commune of Tangier requesting a total of 100 children's books, whose price is only five dirhams each, and a UV tarpaulin to protect children against the sun. To his amazement, the response of the Tangier institution was not positive.

Serhani Youssef said that the event, despite these incidents, was a success. The reading initiative hosted storytellers from Larache and the French Institute of Tangier. Over 90 public school children benefited from the program.

The organisers of the event  emphasised their disappointment with the urban district of Tangier, which according to them "is not interested in culture and still suffers from a bureaucratic mentality that goes against aiding the development of young schoolchildren. "

The Fes Medina Children's Library  is a huge success thanks to public support 

Thankfully, in Fez the local Fes Medina Children's Library caters to around 400 children a month and is funded by public donations.

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Thursday, December 10, 2015

Storytellers Donate to Fez Medina Children's Library


Yesterday a group of storytellers from around the world converged in Fez. After a tour of the Fez Medina, the group gathered for a Medina Children's Library fundraiser at Riad Zany, hosted by The View From Fez.


Following the afternoon at Riad Zany they held a storytelling session at The Ruined Garden, with a wonderful (and plentiful) menu of fine food.

The View From Fez and the Medina Children's Library would like to thank Christina Ammon and her storytellers for their generous donation and wonderful stories.

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Wednesday, November 04, 2015

Australian Artist's Work to Benefit Moroccan Children


David Hinchliffe is a renowned Australian artist who recently spent time in Morocco. His beautiful and colourful paintings of local souks are for sale exclusively through The View From Fez. David has generously offered to donate 20% of the proceeds to the Medina Children's Library in Fez

Fez Medina. Oil on canvas.  35x40cm.  $1100
CLICK ON IMAGES TO ENLARGE 

David Hinchliffe's work is highly collectable. He has had recent sell-out exhibitions in London, New York, Hong Kong, Paris and Brisbane, and has won numerous art prizes. Fascinated by cities, David has also had experience of running one - he was, until recently, Deputy Lord Mayor of Brisbane, Australia.

Over the next few weeks The View From Fez will display more paintings from his series on Morocco. David feels passionately that art should be affordable, so has kept the prices of these works far below what his work usually commands in galleries.

David has travelled and painted widely in the United States and UK and is represented extensively in collections around the world. While his work is principally oils on canvas or linen, he has also produced many gouache works and sculpture as well as holding two exhibitions of his photographs.

Light and Shade in the Medina. Oil on canvas 35x40cm. $1100

In his own words - David Hinchliffe says :

FEZ – AN ASSAULT ON THE ARTISTIC SENSES

Nothing really prepares you for Fez. It’s a complete assault on the senses – sight, smell, sound and of course taste.

For an artist however, the greatest of these is sight. The Fez medina is such an artist’s paradise.

It’s no surprise that some of the great artists of the world such as Delacroix, Matisse and Australia’s own Brett Whitely were hugely influenced by their experience in Morocco.

I’m not the first person to compare it to walking back into the pages of the Bible or the Koran. Confusing alleyways are crowded with exotic people, occasionally animals, lots of colourful and ancient merchandise and the buzz of constant activity. It’s a world away from my modern, western hometown of Brisbane, Australia.

I was in Fez largely because of my friendship with ex-Brisbane journalists and authors Sandy McCutcheon and Suzanna Clarke. When my friend Meg and I decided we would finally tick the Moroccan ‘to do’ box after decades of talking about it, Sandy and Suzanna offered lots of friendly helpful advice.

It’s taken me about a year to distil the many colourful images and sensations from that trip before I could finally arrive at my own personal way of depicting Fez and the other Moroccan towns we visited.


I work in oils on canvas or board and my usual subjects are the streets of New York, London, Paris and the large bustling cities I encounter on my travels. I find that in each city my style changes slightly which is no doubt a response to the city itself. For example I hope in my New York paintings I capture something of that city’s incredible energy and drive while the Paris paintings are always my most ‘romantic’.

But how was I to portray Fez and the streets of Morocco unlike any other city or place I’ve visited?

After playing around with a few sketches and some small studies in oil, I found that in addition to the colours of Morocco, the rich shades of the rugs, the patina of the medina walls etc, I was using a lot more black as a base for the painting. Black is not usually a major colour on my palette. It’s clearly a response to the shadows, the nooks and crannies of the medina’s twisting seemingly endless laneways.

Shadow is clearly a visual metaphor for mystery and there’s a lot about these medinas that presents as a mystery…and even with Sandy’s incredibly helpful advice about how to get around, much of it still remains a mystery.

That’s the attraction for someone from the west where we are used to things revealing themselves almost immediately. In Fez’s case, it’s a mystery how a place like it exists at all in this fast-paced world. As you walk through the streets and laneways I couldn’t help thinking what lies behind those ancient crumbling stuccoed, brick and cement walls. What lies behind the shops covered in Moroccan rugs or brilliant brass lights, woodcraft and ceramics? What of the lives of the people whose ancestors have lived here for millennia?

There’s also that rich texture of surfaces, walls that have been constructed, repaired, stuccoed, painted and repainted over hundreds of years. No mere painting can capture that.

I don’t have any illusions about what I do as an artist. I can’t possibly answer all the questions about Fez in a few paintings. I paint pictures that I hope reflect my experience of a place. I hope I capture a moment or perhaps the atmosphere of a place or even just an impression. I don’t solve ancient riddles and unlike so many good people in the world, I’m not healing the sick or providing shelter for the homeless.

However, through the sale of my work, I hope I can do some good. That’s why I was delighted when Sandy and Suzanna suggested that a percentage of those sales could go to the medina’s children library.

Hopefully those who’ve been to Fez can relate to these paintings and just as hopefully, it will inspire people who’ve never been there to take the step.

Medina Streetscape. Oil on canvas 35x64cm. $1750

David Hinchliffe  trained under Brisbane artist, John Rigby, painting as a teenager with contemporaries Tomas McAulay and Rex Backhaus Smith and also studied under premier Australian landscape artist and Archibald prize-winner, William Robinson at the University of Southern Queensland.


David furthered his practical artistic study in both New York, Paris and London in the 70s while working his way around the world painting portrait commissions until he returned home to pursue a career in politics. He has painted portraits of Poet Bruce Dawe, Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Fraser and businessman, Sir Alex McKay.

The Carpet Shop.oil on board, 30x40cm. $1100

Described by the late James Gleeson as having an "exceptional talent",  David has emerged from 3 decades of work in the public domain to return with renewed passion to his career as a painter. He has exhibited at galleries in Brisbane and the Gold Coast as well as at Harrods in London and at Village Art gallery in Greenwich Village 1996, at the Australian Consulate, New York and at Michael Ingbar Gallery on Broadway in Soho, New York and in Paris.

Earlier this year David Hinchliffe had a remarkable sell out show at the Affordable Art Fair in New York. The New York art buyers fell in love with Davids works and according to Fair organisers the number of David Hinchliffe works sold this year, far exceeded any other artist at the New York Affordable Art Fair. In David's works "There were so many red dots it looked like we had the measles!"

Fez Medina #2. Oil on canvas 30x37cm . $950

Please note: the prices are quoted in Australian dollars. Readers of The View From Fez can purchase paintings by contacting us: theviewfromfez@gmail.com

Find out more about the Medina Children's Library:  HERE

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Wednesday, October 28, 2015

Storytellers Raise Funds For Medina Children's Library


PHOTO ESSAY

A Deep Travel Workshop with Erin Byrne and New York storyteller Doug Cordell (seated right)

Deep Travel is a unique venture, combining writing, storytelling workshops and travel in Morocco. This week they were based in Moulay Idriss Zerhoune, where they held a special evening hosted by Mike Richardson (Cafe Clock - Marrakech and Fez). Not only was the evening a sensational success, but the storytellers raised a generous donation for the Medina Children's Library in Fez


While Mike Richardson and his Scorpion House team put the final touches to the feast, the workshop storytellers gathered around a fire on the balcony to savour the poems of poet and artist Anna Elkins.

Anna Elkins  poems as delicate as her paintings

Anna Elkins, one of the workshop leaders, is the author of the illustrated vignette The Heart Takes Flight, the novel The Honeylicker Angel and a collection of poetry, The Space Between.

Following the poetry reading and a display of Omar Chennafi's fine photographs, the storytelling took a backseat as Mike and his team worked his famous culinary magic.

Mike, Hamza and Rachida  provided fabulous food and hospitality
Tour organiser, Christina Ammon was in fine form
Workshop tutor, Erin Byrne receives a birthday surprise
Novelist and storyteller, Sandy McCutcheon, wrapped up the night
Top photo: Omar Chennafi. All other photographs: Suzanna Clarke

Donations to the Medina Children's Library are welcome! Please contact:  medinachildrenslibrary@gmail.com 

Deep Travel:  https://www.facebook.com/DeepTravelWorkshops

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