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February 4, 2011

The Arab Street: Here’s Who I Am and Here’s What I Need

I have to say, this photo did confuse me for a second. It was photographed in Sanaa at a demonstration yesterday against the Yemeni President. But because I’ve been looking at pictures of rocks showering Cairo, I first imagined the bread was being worn to protect this man’s skull.

Let’s think about this photo for a minute, though.

Of course, the point of taping bread to your head while protesting the government is to make the point that even the basic staples of life are going lacking, that people can barely sustain themselves.  But then, I believe there’s another element here, perhaps a more practical and political one, as connected to the message as the bread is to this man’s face.

I imagine this man has concluded that the powers-that-be in Yemen can’t see him, that he’s invisible. I think this is the same feeling gripping all the populations in the region and motivating the expanding waves of protests.  As the shouts and screams continue to rise though, I’m sure the people in the streets are also filled with profound uncertainty that their voices will actually be heard.

My sense about this guy is that he has this in mind, so much so that if the powers did happen to lay their eyes on him, he wanted to make sure the message, and the need, would just be that much more obvious.

(photo: Khaled Abdullah/Reuters caption: An opposition supporter with pieces of bread taped to his head shouted antigovernment slogans in Sanaa, Yemen, Thursday. Tens of thousands of protesters rallied in the capital, calling for the ouster of President Ali Abdullah Saleh.)

  • Gasho

    … yeah, and I still think it’s a helmet.

    All the pictures of head wounds, rock throwing, broken buckets on people’s heads, people holding up anything as a shield. I think this guy taped rolls on his head so he could stay in the street to make himself heard. He’s tired of cowering. He want’s to stand up and shout and raise his arms and get others to rise up along side of him… but he was still scared of being pegged in the head with a chunk of concrete. He grabbed what he could find and stayed out in the streets.

    I guess I take that interpretation because I imagine his heart is pounding with anger and fear and excitement. Would he really be crafting this bread-helmet as a message?? He doesn’t strike me here as a guy who’s sense of humor is shining through at the moment.

    Anyway you look at it, though, it’s just as meaningful.

  • Enoch Root

    In no small part, these protests are due to rising food prices.

    Rising food prices due in no small part to the activities of US hedge funds looking for something to invest in other than toxic assets, and finding commodities.

    For reals.

    • nikto

      Thanks for the info, EnochRoot!

      Keep spreading The Truth!!

  • echo

    instant icon.

    We are all bread-heads now.

    I bow to the genius of this expression.

  • omen

    One of the slogans chanted by protesters in Egypt today: “Bread, Freedom, Human Dignity”

    via

  • omen

    how american supported neoliberal policies (on top of mubarak’s thievery) have crippled egypt.

    link

  • omen

    you know, this guy is pretty husky. he doesn’t look like at risk of going hungry. maybe bread means something else to him.

    The Egyptian ‘Bread Riots’ of 1977 which rocked most major cities in Egypt from January 18-19 of that year, were a spontaneous uprising by hundreds of thousands of lower class people protesting World Bank and International Monetary Fund-mandated termination of state subsidies on basic foodstuffs. As many as 800 people were wounded, and the protests were only ended with the deployment of the army.

    link

    perhaps bread also symbolizes a call to insurrection.

    mosaic news on linktv harkened back to the bread riots under sadat.