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ENDURING SPIRIT
WORKS BY CONTEMPORARY CHALDEAN IRAQI ARTISTS

On Saturday, September 15, 2007, my husband and I
attended an art exhibit entitled “ENDURING SPIRIT”
which was led by artists Amer Hanna Fatuhi (Art
Exhibit Supervisor) and Lavon Ammori (Art Exhibit
Organizer). It was held at MONA, the Museum of New
Art, an intriguing gallery located in Pontiac, MI.
The art exhibit was a collection of ten contemporary
Chaldean (Native Iraqi) artists which included
pioneer artists Issa Hanna Dabish (1919- Present)
and Khuder Jirjees (1938-2006). Others involved were
Mazin Eli Al-Sha’awi, Qais Al-Sindy, Lavon Ammori,
Paul Batou, Farouk Kaspaules, Sam Selou, Zuhair
Shaaouni, Amer Hanna Fatuhi.
People of various ethnicities and age groups – from
as young as toddlers to college students and elders
– attended the exhibit. I wished I had brought my
eighteen month old daughter along, since from this
early on I want her to be well connected with her
ancestor’s rich heritage. However, I hadn’t expected
to see so many mothers with their children. That was
a great decision on their part. Especially today,
when Chaldeans are facing brutal religious, ethnic
and political struggles in their homeland Iraq, it
is important that children are taught who the
Chaldeans really are and how significant their
contributions were, and still are, to our entire
society. After all, Chaldeans, the descendants of
Abraham, are the founders of the most ancient and
sophisticated civilization which dates back to 5300
BC.
While a small number of people know this simple
fact, the artists mentioned above, through the
combined 30 art works portrayed at the museum, need
to be commended for using their creative work to
introduce these subjects. Each artist’s beautiful
and unique work has its own style and technique and
addresses various issues such as landscape,
traditional scenes of popular life, love, family,
war, exile, and politically or socially motivated
themes.
The exhibit was possible thanks to the Chaldean
Educational Center of America (CECA), in
collaboration with the Michigan Council for Arts and
Cultural Affairs (MCACA), Mesopotamia Art History
and Beyond (Learning Studio and Art Gallery), IAA
(Iraqi Artists Association), MCFS (Michigan
Community Financial Services), the Eye Clinic (Dr.
Emad Nakkash, MD), and Mr. Tarik Daoud of Al-Long
Ford. Jef Bourgeau, who is a visual artist, an
instructor at Oakland University and the Director of
MONA (www.detroitmona.com),
deserves a special appreciation for helping make the
exhibit a success.
The outcome at MONA was impressive, and covered by
numerous community media such as ICA TV (Iraqi
Chaldean American TV), The Middle-East Radio,
Tomorrow's Radio, Ishtar Satellite TV, the Chaldean
News magazine, and the Chaldean Detroit Times paper.
Yet such great artistry needs to draw forth broader
media attention in order for more people to
understand and appreciate the importance of this
particular culture and its current ongoing
struggles, especially in Metro-Detroit where over
250,000 Chaldeans reside. Artist and Historian Amer
Hanna Fatuhi, the president of CECA and senior art
director of Mesopotamia Art Gallery in Ferndale
stated, “We hope that in the future the Detroit Free
Press and the Detroit News, who we had invited to
this and other prior events, will also attend to
honor the diversity of Metro-Detroit.”
With the fast rate the Chaldean community is growing
– in all fields, including arts and culture – these
artists’ efforts and achievements will surely soon
reach people all around the world, thus enriching
other communities’ lives as they have done with
their own.





Weam Namou-Yatooma,
Novelist & Film Maker
IAA
President
To
Learn more about this exhibition or the artists
involved, kindly visit the link below:
http://kaldaya.net/2007/9_DailyNews_Sep2007/Sep4_07_E2_IAA.html
You
can also contact the supervisor of this exhibit,
visual artist and historian Amer Hanna Fatuhi at:
www.mesopotamiaartgallery.com
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