Category Archives: Cultural events
Visit with the Ismaili Community
Hi friends!
Last Wednesday, the ISL hosted an Ismaili Community event. 65 young people ranging in ages 13-17 came for a tour and discussion. The tour took place in the McLennan Library, specifically on the current exhibition ‘Strokes and Hairlines: Elegant Writing and its Place in Muslim Book Culture’ curated by Adam Gacek and in celebration of the 60th anniversary of the Institute of Islamic Studies and the Islamic Studies Library.
The students were then provided with a short lecture on Arabic calligraphy and the different scripts, including an activity in which the students were asked to guess the script while exploring the recently digitized Islamic Calligraphy exhibition. The students went away with a few souvenirs graciously put together by Anna DiPietro and her staff.
Photos courtesy of Sabrina Hanna.
Film screening at the ISL on Feb. 28th!
Evening of Calligraphy & Demonstrations with Dr. Hilal Kazan
Hi friends! Don’t forget about tonight’s Evening of Calligraphy &
Demonstrations with Dr. Hilal Kazan! Please note this will be held in Leacock Building, Room 819 on the McGill downtown campus! Come one, come all!!
The Islamic Studies Library (ISL) was founded in 1952 in conjunction with the Institute of Islamic Studies (IIS). Dr. W.C. Smith, founder and first Director of the IIS sought to give greater definition to the field of Islamic studies. The library has grown from a collection of 250 books to 125,000 volumes. On display are some of the treasures from its collection and history. For example in 1959 the former President of Tunisia, Habib Bourghuiba visited the IIS and ISL and donated a Qur’ānic leaf, in 1971 the former Shah of Iran sent a personal invitation to then Director of the IIS, Dr. Charles J. Adams. We also have on display one volume from the complete holdings of the journal of al-Azhar in Cairo. Dr. W.C. Smith’s Ph.D. dissertation was an analysis of these publications.
Come one, come all!!
Film screening this Thursday Nov. 29 at the ISL!
Indonesian Cultural event
Hi friends! Tomorrow evening the the Ambassador of the Republic of Indonesia, H.E. Dienne H. Moehario, with the Schulich School of Music and McGill’s Institute of Islamic Studies, will host a workshop, reception and concert as part of an Indonesia-Canada Cultural Night on November 6. The events are being held in celebration of the 60th anniversary of Indonesia-Canada diplomatic relations.
For further information, please see the Indonesian Cultural Event announcement.
November 6th, 2012
6:30 pm – 9:00 pm
Tanna Schulich Hall (527 Sherbrooke Street West)
Come one, come all!
The 13th FMA starts tomorrow. Check out the program!
Conceived and produced by Alchimies, Créations et Cultures, the Arab World Festival of Montreal (Festival du Monde Arabe de Montréal or FMA) is a thematic event dedicated to the meeting of and dialogue between Arabic and Western cultures. Through its four sections – Performing Arts, Culture Forum, Cinema, and La Medina – the FMA presents modern bodies of work, concerning the heritage as much as the day-to-day lives of people through original productions in dance, music, theatre, multidisciplinary and arts.
Representing a myriad of tendencies and artistic orientations that allow reflection and experimentation, the FMA welcomes artists from all cultural horizons, local and international broadcasters and producers in order to build a space dedicated to cultural exchange and “breeding” as well as to provide festival-goers with a wide range of first-rate activities.
Objectives
– Establishing an artistic space dedicated to encouraging dialogue between cultural identities stemming from different horizons, by means of creating, producing and broadcasting innovative artistic projects.
– Offering Québec’s artists of all backgrounds, the opportunity to exchange their experiences and ideas with other cultures and to enrich their knowledge with new approaches and know-how techniques.
– Supporting and producing artistic initiatives based on the cultural diversity experience in Montreal.
Vision
The word “alchemy” refers to an absolute necessity for all artistic enterprises: the need to re-shape the world through reflection and creation. It also refers to a latent irrationality that allows transforming, merging and recreating different elements.
To develop an artistic scene, an audience or a “collective meaning”, the barriers that define disciplines, styles, traditions and rituals must dissolve, so that the exchange which demands losing sovereignty, can be born. A new work of art becomes able to both awaken and bewilder the public, through abandoning the contentment and comfort of preconceived ideas…
Themes
The artistic management of Alchimies, Créations et Cultures holds various activities, productions, and researches under the umbrella of one different theme each year. The program of the festival consists of reflection exercises that are the foundation of any artistic path, and it suggests new concepts, projects, and opportunities of meetings. Each theme is a voyage of memory and imagination towards a profound universe inscribed in each step, movement, word and meaning. Artists local and international, media crew, all adopt the festival as their own, and attempt to create a harmonious melody of dualities: the self/the Other, and the past/the present.
Alchimies, Créations et Cultures invites choreographers, composers, playwrights, filmmakers, poets and intellectuals to explore and open new doors to create new forms, colors, melodies and words, and to change conformities and mend differences. The selected or exclusively produced productions thus become an embodiment of the theme, pushing it forward to become a space of cultural exchange where the echoes of the other resound intensely in the depth of the self.
Where’s the friend’s home?
Don’t forget our film screening this Wednesday October 24th, at 5 p.m., in the Octagon room.
Professors Setrag Manoukian and Pouneh Shabani-Jadidi will present “Where is the friend’s home” by Abbas Kiarostami (1987), and moderate the discussion following. You can find more about the film here: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0093342/
We hope to see you there!
The Soul Remembers: A Concert Featuring Master Instrumentalists Dr. A. J. Racy & Souhail Kaspar
Hi friends!
This Friday evening the Institute of Islamic Studies will be hosting a concert in the Redpath Hall (near Morrice Hall) featuring two prominent musicians, Dr. A.J. Race and Souhail Kaspar. The concert is free to one and all.
More information can be found on the IIS Celebrating the 60th Anniversary of the McGill Institute of Islamic Studies website.