![i hate my village i hate my village](http://www.circolomagnolia.it/imagecache/poster/images/events/i-hate-my-village-grand-theatre1.jpg)
The only accessible entry is through the elevator. The corridor usually leading to the upper gallery is obstructed by a wall in which four oversized wisdom teeth are stuck. The stump of an oversized arm is hanging from the ceiling.
I HATE MY VILLAGE WINDOWS
The windows to the exhibition space are darkened. With the exhibition “Stein In My Mind” CALL now opens the doors and together with works of the participating artists the editorial office and a “bed set” for a potential porn shooting give a foretaste of CALLzine #2.
![i hate my village i hate my village](https://i0.wp.com/www.santeria.milano.it/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/48344971_2047413562006891_4786246503087734784_n.jpg)
The common ground is the exclamation: “art and feminism”!ĭuring the last couple of months CALL has moved its headquarters to Hohenlockstedt, where a new issue of the magazine is taking form. Helped by her parents and a businessman uncle, the Haji Amina Charity Trust was formed in Doda in 2005 and this funds the school.CALL is a platform for different formats in varying constellations of people: A homonymous magazine, an event in a boxing ring on Hamburg’s Reeperbahn, lectures, texts and exhibitions. That is “…why I have such hopes for the children of my village to grow up untainted by the disturbances and anger and resentment and lack of opportunity that unfortunately permeates normal life in ‘Kashmir proper’.” A postgraduate in English literature, she has earlier worked as a content writer and an accountant in Bengaluru until she decided to settle down in Breswana. “My village, my school, and my people in a little village I call home…are blissfully unaware of the political machinations in Delhi and Srinagar…” she wrote on her blog. The co-ed school that started from the Haji family home with a couple of kindergarteners now has more than 450 students up to Class X from several nearby villages. In 2017, she received an award from the J&K government for social reforms and empowerment. The Dubai-born, Bengaluru-educated Sabbah has been quite active on social media, often posting activities of her family-run school that was lauded for bringing quality education to one of the remotest corners of J&K. However, sharing objectionable social media posts is equally damaging and punishable under law. Her father Saleem Haji said: “We are in the process of looking for a new director for the school.” He defended Sabbah, saying all “children make mistakes and she has repented for hers…She had shared the post, not made such remarks herself”. The school management fired her from her position and clarified that “a recent distasteful media post during the rounds has nothing to do with the school and that the said person has acted in their individual capacity after their tenure with the school ended”. Several people called out the school and demanded its closure. Rawat that Sabbah shared attracted widespread criticism against the not-for-profit English-medium school she and her mother founded in 2009 in her native village, accessible only after a trek of three-four hours through mountainous terrain that remains snowed out in winter. The magistrate said security agencies would monitor her activities for a year. A first class executive magistrate gave Sabbah, 39, bail on a personal bond of Rs 50,000 after she submitted her written apology. She spent four days in custody and apologised in writing for the post. Bipin Rawat a “war criminal” after he died in a helicopter crash on December 8. JAMMU: Sabbah Haji, the former director and co-founder of Haji Public School in the remote mountain village of Breswana in Doda district of eastern Jammu, was released on bail on Friday following her arrest last week for sharing an offensive social media post that called CDS Gen.