Biblioteca Biblioteca
Buscar

Kurdipedia son las mayores fuentes de información kurda!


Search Options





Búsqueda Avanzada      Teclado


Buscar
Búsqueda Avanzada
Biblioteca
Nombres Kurdos
Cronología de los hechos
Fuentes
Historia
Colecciones usuario
Actividades
Buscar Ayuda?
Publicación
Video
Clasificaciones
Elemento Random!
Enviar
Enviar artículo
Enviar imagen
Survey
Su opinion
Contacto
¿Qué tipo de información necesitamos!
Normas
Términos de uso
Calidad de artículo
Instrumentos
Acerca
Kurdipedia Archivists
Artículos nosotros!
Añadir Kurdipedia a su sitio web
Añadir / Eliminar Email
Estadísticas de visitantes
Estadísticas de artículos
Fuentes Convertidor
Calendarios Convertidor
Lenguas y dialectos de las páginas
Teclado
Enlaces útiles
Kurdipedia extension for Google Chrome
Cookies
Idiomas
کوردیی ناوەڕاست
کرمانجی - کوردیی سەروو
Kurmancî - Kurdîy Serû
هەورامی
Zazakî
English
Française
Deutsch
عربي
فارسی
Türkçe
Nederlands
Svenska
Español
Italiano
עברית
Pусский
Norsk
日本人
中国的
Հայերեն
Ελληνική
لەکی
Azərbaycanca
Mi cuenta
Registrarse
Membresía!
Olvidó su contraseña?
Buscar Enviar Instrumentos Idiomas Mi cuenta
Búsqueda Avanzada
Biblioteca
Nombres Kurdos
Cronología de los hechos
Fuentes
Historia
Colecciones usuario
Actividades
Buscar Ayuda?
Publicación
Video
Clasificaciones
Elemento Random!
Enviar artículo
Enviar imagen
Survey
Su opinion
Contacto
¿Qué tipo de información necesitamos!
Normas
Términos de uso
Calidad de artículo
Acerca
Kurdipedia Archivists
Artículos nosotros!
Añadir Kurdipedia a su sitio web
Añadir / Eliminar Email
Estadísticas de visitantes
Estadísticas de artículos
Fuentes Convertidor
Calendarios Convertidor
Lenguas y dialectos de las páginas
Teclado
Enlaces útiles
Kurdipedia extension for Google Chrome
Cookies
کوردیی ناوەڕاست
کرمانجی - کوردیی سەروو
Kurmancî - Kurdîy Serû
هەورامی
Zazakî
English
Française
Deutsch
عربي
فارسی
Türkçe
Nederlands
Svenska
Español
Italiano
עברית
Pусский
Norsk
日本人
中国的
Հայերեն
Ελληνική
لەکی
Azərbaycanca
Registrarse
Membresía!
Olvidó su contraseña?
        
 kurdipedia.org 2008 - 2024
 Acerca
 Elemento Random!
 Términos de uso
 Kurdipedia Archivists
 Su opinion
 Colecciones usuario
 Cronología de los hechos
 Actividades - Kurdipedia
 Ayudar
Nuevo elemento
Biblioteca
Refugiado número 33333
19-02-2023
زریان عەلی
Biblioteca
Liberando la vida: la revolución de las mujeres
20-10-2022
ڕاپەر عوسمان عوزێری
Biblioteca
Kurdistán: desmantelando al Estado
19-07-2022
ڕاپەر عوسمان عوزێری
Biblioteca
Revolución de las mujeres y luchas por la vida ¡Defender Rojava
19-07-2022
ڕاپەر عوسمان عوزێری
Biblioteca
Los kurdos en Iraq
19-07-2022
ڕاپەر عوسمان عوزێری
Biblioteca
La revolución de Kurdistán y Medio Oriente
18-07-2022
ڕاپەر عوسمان عوزێری
Biblioteca
LA CONSTRUCCIÓN DE NACIONALISMOS EN EL KURDISTÁN
18-07-2022
ڕاپەر عوسمان عوزێری
Biblioteca
Los Refranes Kurdos
18-07-2022
ڕاپەر عوسمان عوزێری
Estadística
Artículos 517,311
Imágenes 105,623
Libros 19,137
Archivos relacionados 96,332
Video 1,306
Biblioteca
El fusil de mi padre
Partidos y Organizaciones
Partido de los Trabajadores...
Biblioteca
Los Refranes Kurdos
Biblioteca
La revolución de Kurdistán ...
Biblioteca
Liberando la vida: la revol...
Why are we ashamed of our mistakes?
Grupo: Artículos | Lenguaje de los artículos: English
Share
Facebook0
Twitter0
Telegram0
LinkedIn0
WhatsApp0
Viber0
SMS0
Facebook Messenger0
E-Mail0
Copy Link0
Clasificación elemento
Excelente
Muy bueno
Promedio
Pobre
Malo
Añadir a mis colecciones
Escriba su comentario sobre este artículo!
Titel der Geschichte
Metadata
RSS
Búsqueda en Google de imágenes relacionadas con el elemento seleccionado!
Buscar en Google para el artículo seleccionado!
کوردیی ناوەڕاست0
Kurmancî - Kurdîy Serû0
عربي0
فارسی0
Türkçe0
עברית0
Deutsch0
Español0
Française0
Italiano0
Nederlands0
Svenska0
Ελληνική0
Azərbaycanca0
Fins0
Norsk0
Pусский0
Հայերեն0
中国的0
日本人0

Why are we ashamed of our mistakes?

Why are we ashamed of our mistakes?
Shirwan Fatih (born 1974, Iraq) lives and works in Sulaymaniya, Iraq. He is among a new wave of artists in Sulaymaniya to work with site-specific work, installation, and video art. Fatih focuses on the education system in Iraq, and works closely with schools and schoolchildren to produce his work. For the project Rubber (2009), Shirwan collected rubber erasers from children from six different grades at an elementary school in Sulaymaniya. The piece captured the struggle between nature and nurture, and the processes of repetition and correction in the learning systems designed for children. He speaks to Ruya about this, and his recent work.
As an artist, what drew you to the idea of working with schools and school children?
A school is a public space and an inherent part of the community that it belongs to. I focus on education in order to talk about the wider problems that we face in Kurdistan and in Iraq. With my earlier project Rubber (2009), I was interested in how education conditions our behaviour as individuals and creates social norms. For example, everybody makes mistakes, but people seldom admit to them, especially people in positions of power, like politicians and leaders. Yet primary school kids admit to their mistakes. For Rubber, I collected children’s rubbers from six different grades at a primary school in Sulaymaniya. The older the children were, the less they used their rubber erasers. My questions were: when adults make mistakes, why do they hide them? Where does this sense of shame come from?
As an adult, to what extent are you drawing on your own experience of school and childhood?
Education in Iraq today is treated like military discipline. It is a continuation of the same education system that grew out of Saddam’s dictatorship for decades. I experienced it when I was at school in the 1980s. My work is a reaction to my own experience which felt as if I was in a military camp being drilled in propaganda, and not a child in school. We all experienced this. I believe that this underlying violence in our education system is a legacy of Saddam’s Ba’ath regime. The focus was on wars; even primary level math books had illustrated rockets and tanks to teach us how to count. In my performance and installation The Coat of My Father (2017), I re-enact this notion of the educator as a patriarchal strongman, and highlight the continuing effects of this across generations.
How have you developed these concepts in other recent work?
I’ve been looking at the regimentation and organisation of time in our education systems, which extends to the way our societies are managed in the post-industrial age. In my new installation, The Dust of Learning (2016), I reproduced a timetable on a black board, and hung school bells that I cut out to resemble the arms of a clock. I exhibited it at the group show ‘Clamour’, curated by the artist Sherko Abbas at the Institute of Fine Art in Sulaymaniya. The piece asks, can learning really be controlled by time? Those who want to learn will do it anyway, at any point of the day and often spontaneously. In my opinion, this regimented time is a weakness in our educational system.
The themes that you address, such as the division of time, and the materials that you use, such as a chalkboard and rubber erasers, could belong to a school anywhere in the world. Why focus on schools on Iraq?
According to research papers I have read, a healthy education system encourages individuals to pursue their ideas and rectify their mistakes. Those individuals are more likely to bring about change and contribute to their communities. I believe that our current education system has no impact on society in Iraq, and as an artist, I want to highlight this.
Iraq was known to have a strong education system up until the 1980s. What do you think contributed to its decline?
The current education system in Iraq is relatively new compared to those in Europe. The first schools were introduced in Iraq in the 1920s, after the King took power. The Alliance School for Girls was set up in Baghdad in 1921 and later the American Jesuits established the Baghdad College in 1932. Though these schools were often denominational, they accepted pupils of all faiths. Before that, education took place within Iraq’s religious institutions. Iraq’s modern educational institutions suffered as I mentioned because of the wars we have been in since 1980, and due to the propaganda of the Ba’th regime. Indoctrination became the primary driving force of education, and not learning. Things became worst during the sanctions and have since stagnated. Our educational policies and syllabi have not changed in over thirty years, making this system at the very least archaic. There have been some reforms but in my opinion they are meaningless formalities. I have not seen any actual change.
Do you consider yourself an activist in society?
As an artist, I have to work with people, but I don’t consider myself an activist. I am asking questions and addressing them to the public, both in my work and day-to-day conversations. In turn, they will have questions for me. It is a reciprocal process.
How do you conceive of the concept of the child, and why is this important for you as an artist?
Children are sensitive, and as my projects show, their behaviour and understanding of the world can easily be molded or manipulated. When I worked on Rubber, I tried to create a happy and comfortable environment for the children, while pushing them to participate and ask questions. I want them to think critically and engage with the project – as opposed to the regimented teaching that they get at school. I made it clear that there was no correct or wrong way to participate. If they made mistakes they could just continue and not be ashamed to admit them. Part of this was fuelled by the nostalgia that I have for my own childhood.
What challenges do you face as an installation artist working in Sulaymaniya?
My work wouldn’t be worthwhile if I didn’t face any challenges. For Rubber, I had to get permission from the teachers in order to intervene in their classrooms and work with the children. Most school teachers in Sulaymaniya are unfamiliar with contemporary art practices and they had trouble understanding the project at first. Working with children was another challenge. Finally, it is difficult to be recognised and to build a reputation as a conceptual artist in Sulaymaniya. This affects all artists in Iraq. I am trying to overcome these difficulties and pave the way for the new generation[1].
Este artículo ha sido escrito en (English) Lenguaje, haga clic en el icono de para abrir el artículo en el idioma original!
This item has been written in (English) language, click on icon to open the item in the original language!
Este artículo ha sido visitado veces 3,614
HashTag
Fuentes
[1] | English | ruyafoundation
Artículos relacionados: 2
Biografía
Fechas y Eventos
Grupo: Artículos
Lenguaje de los artículos: English
Publication date: 25-09-2017 (7 Año)
Ciudades: Sulaimaniyah
Dialecto: Inglés
Libro: Niños
Libro: Educación
Provenza: Irak
Tipo de documento: Idioma original
Technical Metadata
Calidad de artículo: 99%
99%
Añadido por ( نالیا ئیبراهیم ) en 06-10-2019
Este artículo ha sido revisado y publicado por ( ڕێکخراوی کوردیپێدیا ) en 07-10-2019
Este artículo ha actualizado recientemente por ( ڕێکخراوی کوردیپێدیا ) en: 07-10-2019
URL
Este artículo ha sido visitado veces 3,614
Kurdipedia son las mayores fuentes de información kurda!
Biblioteca
Kurdistán: desmantelando al Estado
Biblioteca
Los kurdos en Iraq
Biografía
Abdullah Öcalan
Biblioteca
La revolución de Kurdistán y Medio Oriente
Artículos
La formación del Kurdistán y la seguridad societal
Biblioteca
Liberando la vida: la revolución de las mujeres
Artículos
​Mohandas Gandhi habla con Abdullah Öcalan ​- Sobre la violencia, la no violencia y el Estado
Biblioteca
Revolución de las mujeres y luchas por la vida ¡Defender Rojava

Actual
Biblioteca
El fusil de mi padre
24-12-2013
بەناز جۆڵا
El fusil de mi padre
Partidos y Organizaciones
Partido de los Trabajadores de Kurdistán
14-10-2013
هاوڕێ باخەوان
Partido de los Trabajadores de Kurdistán
Biblioteca
Los Refranes Kurdos
18-07-2022
ڕاپەر عوسمان عوزێری
Los Refranes Kurdos
Biblioteca
La revolución de Kurdistán y Medio Oriente
18-07-2022
ڕاپەر عوسمان عوزێری
La revolución de Kurdistán y Medio Oriente
Biblioteca
Liberando la vida: la revolución de las mujeres
20-10-2022
ڕاپەر عوسمان عوزێری
Liberando la vida: la revolución de las mujeres
Nuevo elemento
Biblioteca
Refugiado número 33333
19-02-2023
زریان عەلی
Biblioteca
Liberando la vida: la revolución de las mujeres
20-10-2022
ڕاپەر عوسمان عوزێری
Biblioteca
Kurdistán: desmantelando al Estado
19-07-2022
ڕاپەر عوسمان عوزێری
Biblioteca
Revolución de las mujeres y luchas por la vida ¡Defender Rojava
19-07-2022
ڕاپەر عوسمان عوزێری
Biblioteca
Los kurdos en Iraq
19-07-2022
ڕاپەر عوسمان عوزێری
Biblioteca
La revolución de Kurdistán y Medio Oriente
18-07-2022
ڕاپەر عوسمان عوزێری
Biblioteca
LA CONSTRUCCIÓN DE NACIONALISMOS EN EL KURDISTÁN
18-07-2022
ڕاپەر عوسمان عوزێری
Biblioteca
Los Refranes Kurdos
18-07-2022
ڕاپەر عوسمان عوزێری
Estadística
Artículos 517,311
Imágenes 105,623
Libros 19,137
Archivos relacionados 96,332
Video 1,306
Kurdipedia son las mayores fuentes de información kurda!
Biblioteca
Kurdistán: desmantelando al Estado
Biblioteca
Los kurdos en Iraq
Biografía
Abdullah Öcalan
Biblioteca
La revolución de Kurdistán y Medio Oriente
Artículos
La formación del Kurdistán y la seguridad societal
Biblioteca
Liberando la vida: la revolución de las mujeres
Artículos
​Mohandas Gandhi habla con Abdullah Öcalan ​- Sobre la violencia, la no violencia y el Estado
Biblioteca
Revolución de las mujeres y luchas por la vida ¡Defender Rojava

Kurdipedia.org (2008 - 2024) version: 15.42
| Contacto | CSS3 | HTML5

| Página tiempo de generación: 1.047 segundo!