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Visit to the Museum of Palestinian Folk Heritage in Ramallah - P1/2 (In Arabic)
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Today’s Enlightening
Entertainment will be
presented in Arabic,
with subtitles in Arabic,
Aulacese (Vietnamese),
Chinese, English,
French, German, Italian,
Indonesian, Japanese,
Korean, Malay,
Persian, Portuguese,
Russian, Spanish
and Thai.
Welcome,
respected viewers.
Today, we will present
the first part
of a 2-part series
about the In’ash Al-Usra
Society’s Museum of
Palestinian Folk Heritage,
in Ramallah, Palestine.
Ramallah is a beautiful city
in the central West Bank,
6 miles north of Jerusalem.
Founded
in the 16th century,
the city has a population
of 25,500 inhabitants.
The In’ash Al-Usra
Society (Rejuvenation
of the Family) is a charity
which was founded
in 1965 as an initiative
by Mrs. Samiha Khalil,
a much loved Palestinian
community leader.
She firmly believed in
the values of empowerment
and self-sufficiency,
and inspired many people
through her life
of community
and national service.
The In’ash Al-Usra
Society assists women
in acquiring skills
to earn their livelihood
and to become
active participants
and decision makers
in their communities.
The society runs
the In’ash College,
the Studies Center
for Palestinian Heritage,
a vocational training center,
two clinics for health
and dental services,
a garment factory,
a kindergarten
and a nursery.
It gives scholarly funds
and provides housing
and cash assistance
to the needy as well as
to victims of conflict.
The Museum of
Palestinian Folk Heritage
was founded in 1977,
as part of the society’s
objective to develop
folk handicrafts
and to preserve
Palestinian folklore.
Mr. Sami,
who is a tour guide
in the museum,
will now show us around
the exhibits’ collection.
The museum
is filled with items
which traditionally
have been used in
Palestinian households.
Here, we notice that
the Palestinian woman
used to grind barley,
wheat, or freekeh
(roasted green wheat)
by using a grinder
this way…
and she put either
the Freekeh or wheat here,
and then the ground item
comes out from here.
She used to
grind everything and
put a plate, a container,
or something like that.
Here we can see a cradle.
The Palestinian woman
used to sway
and comfort her baby
in order to calm him,
so, it was a a lot of work,
and she did that until
her baby calmed down
and slept.
This place is called
“alkhabia,” it's the place
where you can keep wheat
and barley, or the hoard
of the whole year,
the place here
has small windows to
take sugar, rice, wheat,
and from here, the freekeh
and some other items.
Here is a wardrobe
to put woolen blankets,
covers, and mattresses in it,
and this box
is called almerkaz.
This box…
this is the wedding box;
each Palestinian bride
used to buy a box
of this kind, and used to
keep all her personal things
and all her belongings
inside this box.
She kept all her money
in this box,
so the box has a key.
There is no bride
in Palestine
without such a box.
Since more than
40 years ago until now,
every bride had such a box.
It was one of her rights
to have a box like this.
These are some items
that used to be
in the guest house or
in the house of the family.
This is the lamp
as we have said earlier,
and these are trays.
Here is also what they
used to prepare coffee or
to heat many other things
or to warm the home
or guest house.
This is a sieve.
This is a lantern
and it's like the lamp
and it's used for lighting
at night.
This is called oud.
Those are brooms, those
are some kinds of plates
that were used to
prepare food and the like.
These are some of the items
that were used
in the Palestinian
family home, in the house.
This box was used
to keep clothes and
the personal things inside.
This is called… it's like
a basin for the home.
You can see it from here.
This also can be used
for water, it can be used
to keep the water cold
in summer or
to keep the water warm
in winter.
This is the water hole,
right here.
There was a water hole,
and this bucket was for it.
This item was called meckel.
We put water
in this meckel
and all kinds of birds
come to drink from it.
After we return,
we will continue our tour
through the Museum of
Palestinian Folk Heritage
in Ramallah in Palestine.
Please stay tuned
to Supreme Master
Television.
Welcome back to
Enlightening Entertainment
and our visit
to the In’ash El-Usra
Society’s Museum of
Palestinian Folk Heritage
in Ramallah.
Our tour guide Mr. Sami
will now show us
more traditional items
of Palestinian daily life.
We are now visiting
the museum’s beautiful
exhibit of a traditional
Palestinian guest house.
This is a guest house.
The householder used to
come to the guest house,
as every family in Palestine
has a guest house
to receive guests and
people, and the friends
used to meet together and
gather with each other
in the sheikh's home
and used to
narrate their stories,
their problems.
Anybody who has a problem
within his house,
within the family
or with other people,
used to come here
to complain to the sheikh.
Also, they used to stay up
late at night together
and to have a good time
playing the rebeck,
and singing like this way,
and the people
around the singer
sing with him as a chorus
or listen to his songs.
This rebeck
has a deep meaning,
it's not just an instrument
to be played, it's also
a kind of entertainment,
and the singer uses it
to express about
social issues, meaning
it's a kind of media
to express what is
happening in the society.
And there is the coffee man
who is using
the coffee pot this way
and he prepares coffee
for the guests.
This item is used
for the coal.
This is the black coffee.
They used black coffee
as we can see here.
It's necessary to know
that the coffee pot is used
with the left hand.
He pours coffee
with the left hand,
and hold the cup
in the right hand
and drink it this way.
They pour
a very little quantity,
just about one or two sips.
It's something
like courtesy when
friends gather together.
We used this charcoal
to prepare coffee.
Mr. Sami shows us
a traditional wooden
Palestinian house door
with a simple
lock mechanism.
He explains that
there was no need for
elaborate security systems
since burglary
virtually did not exist
among the neighborly
Palestinian people.
This door was used
as a main gate
to close all the doors,
and there was
no metal door.
This is called the old style
of door closer,
and the big key
that you see there
is used here.
As you can see right here,
these are the kinds of wood,
and this is the mechanism
of the doors, there was
no another mechanism,
most people used this
mechanism for the doors.
There was no stealing,
even though there wasn't
a powerful army.
There was no breaking
into people houses,
there was an abundance
of politeness,
good manners, and love.
Next, we will visit
the museum’s
embroidery collection.
The pieces
which are displayed here
are produced by
the In’ash El-Usra
Society’s embroidery
production center,
which employs over
3,000 women and girls
working from their homes.
As we can see here,
there are so many
Palestinian embroideries,
with different designs,
different colors.
As you can see,
here is a design, and
here is another design.
Here also we have
another design,
As you see, here we have
a different design.
Here, there are also
different kinds of designs.
This is
the Palestinian jacket
that was and is still sacred
for the Palestinian people
and it became
an important jacket
in all the events,
and it's the standard one
in all the Palestinian
wedding parties.
Here are
the same clothes also –
very nice clothes
that we feel proud about
wherever we go.
This was
and will be our jacket,
God willing.
This is a jacket that is worn
above the dress.
For example
it was worn this way.
This is for women only,
not for men;
in other words,
the Palestinian ladies
used to wear this jacket
over any dress.
But of course each dress
has its own jacket.
Do you see this,
it's necessary for this
to be of the black color.
And there is also
another thing…
This is called a scarf;
every Palestinian lady
used to wear this uniform.
Just in the last
10 or 20 years,
some ladies turned to wear
what is called
“loose garments”
as a kind of
religious Islamic dress,
but before that, all of them
used to wear this dress
or uniform.
This kind of embroidery
was made by using
The sewing machine
or by using
what is called the loom.
So, the In’ash Al-Usra
Society (Rejuvenation
of the Family)
was known for its
Palestinian embroideries,
and its main aim
was to keep this heritage
from getting lost.
That's why
it's one of the organizations
that have done their best
and spent their money,
energy, and efforts
in order to keep
this immortal heritage
which will continue to stay
until the Judgment Day.
Thank you,
warm-hearted viewers,
for your company
on today’s program.
Please join us
next Friday, August 27,
for the final half
of our 2-part series
on the Museum of
Palestinian Folk Heritage
in Ramallah, Palestine,
founded by
the In’ash El-Usra Society.
Coming up next is
Words of Wisdom,
after Noteworthy News.
Wishing you
Heaven’s blessings,
farewell for now.
For more information
on the In’ash El-Usra
Society’s Museum of
Palestinian Folk Heritage,
please visit
Thank you,
warm-hearted viewers,
for your company
on today’s program.
Please join us
next Friday, August 27,
for the final half
of our 2-part series
on the Museum of
Palestinian Folk Heritage
in Ramallah, Palestine,
founded by
the In’ash El-Usra Society.
Coming up next is
Words of Wisdom,
after Noteworthy News.
Wishing you
Heaven’s blessings,
farewell for now.
Explore a legendary
collection of art from
the National Museum
of Afghanistan,
dating millennia.
Look at these
precious objects
from different parts
of Afghanistan,
with different
cultural integrity.
A part of Afghanistan’s
cultural heritage almost
never before seen.
You look at these
artifacts and you wonder
how they could be made.
They’re so beautiful
and the craftsmanship
is remarkable.
See Afghanistan’s
exquisite treasures
in a 3-part series starting
Tuesday, August 24,
on Supreme Master
Television’s
Enlightening Entertainment.
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