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Egyptian Political Satire By Amr Okasha In Rome

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  • Egyptian Political Satire By Amr Okasha In Rome

    EGYPTIAN POLITICAL SATIRE BY AMR OKASHA IN ROME

    ANSA Med, Italy
    Oct 31 2013

    Vignettes and history of satire at the Academy of Egypt

    (ANSAmed) - ROME, OCTOBER 31 - The recent history of Egypt as told
    through the biting satire of the vignettist Amr Okasha is on display in
    Rome through November 12. Part of the activities for the reopening of
    the Academy of Egypt in the Italian capital, the forty caricatures by
    the young artist are a vehicle for him to tell of his experience and
    that of the many that came before him. The result is a fascinating
    look at political satire through drawing, a practice that dates
    back to the Khedives, "when the only ones to create vignettes were
    Armenians, Greeks, Spaniards and Turks, and only foreign magazines
    published them".

    At 42 years old and after 38 years of drawing, Okasha is one of
    the most well-known Egyptian caricaturists. He mainly publishes in
    the newspaper Al-Wafd - for whom he has been working since 1991 -
    and Al-Dostur. Many of his vignettes, however, have been taken up by
    English-language media outlets such as the Associated Press, BBC and
    The Economist. Others, like the Washington Post, instead often ask him
    to express his opinion through his satirical images. "When Mubarak
    fell," he said, "I drew a vignette for them: the destruction of a
    statue of a pharaoh, surrounded by people running in all directions
    with fragments of it in hand.

    Egyptians were contributing to the dissolution of the regime". The
    second vignette published, he continued, "was one in which a sailboat
    flying a US flag had just thrown President Mubarak overboard. Three
    sharks surrounded him: Turkey, Iran and Israel". The caricatures are
    much more eloquent than many editorials put together. Portraying the
    powers that be - in the case in point, Mubarak - has never been easy.

    "Especially since it was prohibited to draw him in his entirely. The
    first vignette I was able to draw him completely was one in 2010
    during Obama's historic speech in Cairo." Before then, "it was
    impossible to touch him, his wife Suzanne or his sons - especially
    Gamal." Censorship has existed to varying extents in all eras - in the
    time of the Khedives as well as under the British protectorate, the age
    of King Fouad and then Farouk. "Farouk," Okasha said, "prohibited any
    caricature from bearing his features." At that time the first vignettes
    in Egypt were by foreigners and were published mainly in the Armenian
    and French press. "Publishing the first vignettes in Egypt was Le
    Journal d'Abou Naddara, founded in 1877 by Yacoub Sanou," Okasha said.

    The father of modern Egyptian political caricature was instead the
    Armenian Saroukhan in 1924-1925.

    "We had to wait until 1929 before there were Egyptian drawers, as
    well as the appearance of the historic publication Rose Al-Youssef."

    Pressure on newspapers did not let up with the coming of Nasser. "In
    the 1950s there was another crackdown. In every daily or magazine,"
    Okasha said, "there was someone - not a journalist - charged with
    monitoring who set down rules as to what could be published or what
    the vignette of the following day could be on." Foreign policy and
    the Arab-Israeli conflict was the major issue focused on in those
    years. After the October War, however, the attention shifted to
    domestic policy and social issues.

    Okasha's vignettes now take aim at any and every issue - or almost.

    Having declared his opposition to the Muslim Brotherhood, under Morsi
    both he and his family received death threats. "Under the Beblawi
    government, instead, nothing is prohibited," he said - but avoids
    vignettes on the military and General Al-Sissi. "I don't want to do
    anything that could harm the current situation," he said. "We are
    going through a very difficult time." His next vignette will be coming
    out in Al-Wafd on Saturday. "Beblawi as a tiny boxer, surrounded by
    four heavy-weights: strikes, terrorism, inflation and the economic
    crisis. I wonder whether he will be able to defeat them." (ANSAmed).

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