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Sunday, September 25, 2011

Just Up!: CBC News interactive web documentary: Exile Without End: Palestinians in Lebanon

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Last Updated: April 14, 2011

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CBC News correspondent Nahlah Ayed and Radio-Canada's Ahmed Kouaou and Danny Braün spent two weeks documenting life in Shatila, a Palestinian refugee camp in Beirut whose 12,000 inhabitants are among the oldest group of refugees in the world. The web documentary above will introduce you to some of the remarkable people they met there.

Palestinian refugee camps exist throughout the Middle East, but Shatila is one of the poorest and most densely populated. More than 60 years after it was established, its residents remain in limbo, with no state of their own and few rights within Lebanon, raising generation after generation in a place never intended to be permanent.

The website's interactive, street-level interface allows you to follow some of their personal stories from inside the one-square-kilometre camp and experience firsthand Shatila’s maze of cramped, dark tenements, narrow alleyways and shabby infrastructure. The documentary is best viewed in full-screen mode.

CBC News correspondent Nahlah Ayed and Radio-Canada's Ahmed Kouaou and Danny Braün spent two weeks documenting life in Shatila, a Palestinian refugee camp in Beirut whose 12,000 inhabitants are among the oldest group of refugees in the world.

More than 60 years after the camp was set up to house Palestinians fleeing the 1948 Arab-Israeli War, Shatila's residents remain in limbo, with no state of their own and few rights in the country in which they live.

The web documentary above will introduce you to some of the remarkable people who live in Shatila and the immense obstacles they face as they try to raise families, have careers and live out their dreams within the dismal confines of a place never intended to be permanent. Through the website's immersive, interactive interface, you'll get a street-level view of the one-square-kilometre camp and experience what it's like to live inside its maze of cramped, dark tenements, narrow alleyways and shabby infrastructure. Click above to begin your journey. The documentary is best viewed in full-screen mode.

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via cbc.ca

Posted via email from Siobhan O'Flynn's 1001 Tales

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