Dream Project
Palestinian Refugees in Lebanon: a brief history
As a result of 1948 and  1967 war and the Israeli occupation of Palestine, one-third of the  registered Palestine refugees, more than 1.4 million, live in 58  recognised refugee camps in Jordan, Lebanon, Syria, the Gaza Strip and  the West Bank, including East Jerusalem (source: unrwa). There are 12 Refugee camps in Lebanon, housing an estimated half a million refugees. Dream Project was implemented in Burj El Barajneh Refugee Camp in Beirut, Lebanon. 
Palestinian  children are unique in that their political identity is a large part of  who they are on a daily basis; especially because their community lives  with the dream and anticipation of the ‘right of return’ on both an  emotional and political level. This has a very important cultural  significance in insuring that their rights to a homeland are not  forgotten and the hope of going back remains alive … but what happens in  the mean time?

Dream Project: in context 
Palestinians refugee in Lebanon  are limited by the lack of opportunities (such as living within the  dense urban sprawl, inability to own land or build in the refugee camps  and the denial of Palestinian employment in more than 72 skilled and  unskilled professions in Lebanon (in 2003) and the belief that their  futures are elsewhere, in Palestine or other parts of the world. As a  result of immigration, the children’s dreams are loaded with history,  often connected to a romanticised image of Palestine: they want to be  farmers that return to farm their lands or soldiers that will liberate  it. Occasionally they will relate to social power positions such as  professionalism. Dreams of becoming doctors or teachers are common  especially when they are young as it will allow them to imagine clearly  and practically how they can change what they cannot change currently.  However, these dreams often fade as they grow older and are filled with  the knowledge of economic and legal obstacles towards getting there…  the Dream Project aims to address personal dreaming because it can have a  positive impact on their present situation in Lebanon as well as their  futures in general. This is particularly relevant with regards to their  commitments towards searching for these dreams and believing that they  are possible to achieve. This project aims to address the possibilities,  to show that small-scale participation and expressions (that are  enjoyable and creative) can really be effective in improving the every  day life conditions around them. 
As such the  project aims to encourage the belief in dreaming through the  investigation of the process of (de/re)-constructing our ‘dreams so as  to unravel them into separate ingredients that can be expressed and  visualised in several ways that initiate endless ideas that make us see  our dreams as an ongoing process that takes place all the time, and not  merely as something in the future that is definitive and grand.
The Dream  Project—or process of unravelling ‘dreams’—was investigated in two  consecutive workshops, each concerned with a different aspect and scale  of ‘dreaming’; the first is a personal exploration, the second is a  spatial and social one.
Dream Project 1: I want to be … – oreed an akoon …Dream Project 2: Dream Space – hilmak meen bisa3

Burj El Barajneh camp in Beirut, Lebanon.
back to Dream Project 1 home page

Dream Project

Palestinian Refugees in Lebanon: a brief history

As a result of 1948 and 1967 war and the Israeli occupation of Palestine, one-third of the registered Palestine refugees, more than 1.4 million, live in 58 recognised refugee camps in Jordan, Lebanon, Syria, the Gaza Strip and the West Bank, including East Jerusalem (source: unrwa). There are 12 Refugee camps in Lebanon, housing an estimated half a million refugees. Dream Project was implemented in Burj El Barajneh Refugee Camp in Beirut, Lebanon.

Palestinian children are unique in that their political identity is a large part of who they are on a daily basis; especially because their community lives with the dream and anticipation of the ‘right of return’ on both an emotional and political level. This has a very important cultural significance in insuring that their rights to a homeland are not forgotten and the hope of going back remains alive … but what happens in the mean time?


Dream Project: in context

Palestinians refugee in Lebanon are limited by the lack of opportunities (such as living within the dense urban sprawl, inability to own land or build in the refugee camps and the denial of Palestinian employment in more than 72 skilled and unskilled professions in Lebanon (in 2003) and the belief that their futures are elsewhere, in Palestine or other parts of the world. As a result of immigration, the children’s dreams are loaded with history, often connected to a romanticised image of Palestine: they want to be farmers that return to farm their lands or soldiers that will liberate it. Occasionally they will relate to social power positions such as professionalism. Dreams of becoming doctors or teachers are common especially when they are young as it will allow them to imagine clearly and practically how they can change what they cannot change currently. However, these dreams often fade as they grow older and are filled with the knowledge of economic and legal obstacles towards getting there… the Dream Project aims to address personal dreaming because it can have a positive impact on their present situation in Lebanon as well as their futures in general. This is particularly relevant with regards to their commitments towards searching for these dreams and believing that they are possible to achieve. This project aims to address the possibilities, to show that small-scale participation and expressions (that are enjoyable and creative) can really be effective in improving the every day life conditions around them.

As such the project aims to encourage the belief in dreaming through the investigation of the process of (de/re)-constructing our ‘dreams so as to unravel them into separate ingredients that can be expressed and visualised in several ways that initiate endless ideas that make us see our dreams as an ongoing process that takes place all the time, and not merely as something in the future that is definitive and grand.

The Dream Project—or process of unravelling ‘dreams’—was investigated in two consecutive workshops, each concerned with a different aspect and scale of ‘dreaming’; the first is a personal exploration, the second is a spatial and social one.

Dream Project 1: I want to be … – oreed an akoon …
Dream Project 2: Dream Space – hilmak meen bisa3

Burj El Barajneh camp in Beirut, Lebanon.


back to Dream Project 1 home page

Dream Project 1: I want to be … – oreed an akoon …
Date: 2003Location: Burj El BarajneCollaborative  team: Dalal Abed El Rahman, Iman Bekdash, Lilas Bitar, Salah Hamza,  Sirine Kalash, Racha Najdi, Lucine Sarhan.Partners:  If-Untitled Architecture, Beit Atfal Assoumoud, Ghassan Kanafani  Cultural Foundation and Association Najdeh, Beirut Theatre. 
 
“I want to be”,  was the first part of the Dream project. It explored the personal  future visions of each child, especially in relation to their careers or  ‘things they want to be’ when they are ‘grown ups’.
The project  focused on the ‘time frame’ and ‘scale’ of the dreams, employing  practical, creative and technical skills of ‘making’ with the aim of  testing them and understanding them better. The children fragmented the  ingredients of their dreams through a series of mindmaps (written,  remembered and drawn); the fragments were then edited and  re-arranged/re-assembled innovatively different ways of seeing or  experiencing the original dreams. These were expressed through personal  performances composed of dream costumes (dream robes—3D sculptural robes  that are worn or attached to the body) and narratives accompanied by  projections, choreography and music.
Friends and family were invited to the public performance to share the process and outcome of the dream investigation.

the project was followed by Dream Project 2: Dream Space – hilmak meen bisa3

back to Dream Project 1 home page

Dream Project 1: I want to be … – oreed an akoon …


Date: 2003
Location: Burj El Barajne
Collaborative team: Dalal Abed El Rahman, Iman Bekdash, Lilas Bitar, Salah Hamza, Sirine Kalash, Racha Najdi, Lucine Sarhan.
Partners: If-Untitled Architecture, Beit Atfal Assoumoud, Ghassan Kanafani Cultural Foundation and Association Najdeh, Beirut Theatre.

 

“I want to be”, was the first part of the Dream project. It explored the personal future visions of each child, especially in relation to their careers or ‘things they want to be’ when they are ‘grown ups’.

The project focused on the ‘time frame’ and ‘scale’ of the dreams, employing practical, creative and technical skills of ‘making’ with the aim of testing them and understanding them better. The children fragmented the ingredients of their dreams through a series of mindmaps (written, remembered and drawn); the fragments were then edited and re-arranged/re-assembled innovatively different ways of seeing or experiencing the original dreams. These were expressed through personal performances composed of dream costumes (dream robes—3D sculptural robes that are worn or attached to the body) and narratives accompanied by projections, choreography and music.

Friends and family were invited to the public performance to share the process and outcome of the dream investigation.

the project was followed by Dream Project 2: Dream Space – hilmak meen bisa3


back to Dream Project 1 home page

Dream Project
Palestinian Refugees in Lebanon: a brief history
As a result of 1948 and  1967 war and the Israeli occupation of Palestine, one-third of the  registered Palestine refugees, more than 1.4 million, live in 58  recognised refugee camps in Jordan, Lebanon, Syria, the Gaza Strip and  the West Bank, including East Jerusalem (source: unrwa). There are 12 Refugee camps in Lebanon, housing an estimated half a million refugees. Dream Project was implemented in Burj El Barajneh Refugee Camp in Beirut, Lebanon. 
Palestinian  children are unique in that their political identity is a large part of  who they are on a daily basis; especially because their community lives  with the dream and anticipation of the ‘right of return’ on both an  emotional and political level. This has a very important cultural  significance in insuring that their rights to a homeland are not  forgotten and the hope of going back remains alive … but what happens in  the mean time?

Dream Project: in context 
Palestinians refugee in Lebanon  are limited by the lack of opportunities (such as living within the  dense urban sprawl, inability to own land or build in the refugee camps  and the denial of Palestinian employment in more than 72 skilled and  unskilled professions in Lebanon (in 2003) and the belief that their  futures are elsewhere, in Palestine or other parts of the world. As a  result of immigration, the children’s dreams are loaded with history,  often connected to a romanticised image of Palestine: they want to be  farmers that return to farm their lands or soldiers that will liberate  it. Occasionally they will relate to social power positions such as  professionalism. Dreams of becoming doctors or teachers are common  especially when they are young as it will allow them to imagine clearly  and practically how they can change what they cannot change currently.  However, these dreams often fade as they grow older and are filled with  the knowledge of economic and legal obstacles towards getting there…  the Dream Project aims to address personal dreaming because it can have a  positive impact on their present situation in Lebanon as well as their  futures in general. This is particularly relevant with regards to their  commitments towards searching for these dreams and believing that they  are possible to achieve. This project aims to address the possibilities,  to show that small-scale participation and expressions (that are  enjoyable and creative) can really be effective in improving the every  day life conditions around them. 
As such the  project aims to encourage the belief in dreaming through the  investigation of the process of (de/re)-constructing our ‘dreams so as  to unravel them into separate ingredients that can be expressed and  visualised in several ways that initiate endless ideas that make us see  our dreams as an ongoing process that takes place all the time, and not  merely as something in the future that is definitive and grand.
The Dream  Project—or process of unravelling ‘dreams’—was investigated in two  consecutive workshops, each concerned with a different aspect and scale  of ‘dreaming’; the first is a personal exploration, the second is a  spatial and social one.
Dream Project 1: I want to be … – oreed an akoon …Dream Project 2: Dream Space – hilmak meen bisa3

Burj El Barajneh camp in Beirut, Lebanon.
back to Dream Project 1 home page

Dream Project

Palestinian Refugees in Lebanon: a brief history

As a result of 1948 and 1967 war and the Israeli occupation of Palestine, one-third of the registered Palestine refugees, more than 1.4 million, live in 58 recognised refugee camps in Jordan, Lebanon, Syria, the Gaza Strip and the West Bank, including East Jerusalem (source: unrwa). There are 12 Refugee camps in Lebanon, housing an estimated half a million refugees. Dream Project was implemented in Burj El Barajneh Refugee Camp in Beirut, Lebanon.

Palestinian children are unique in that their political identity is a large part of who they are on a daily basis; especially because their community lives with the dream and anticipation of the ‘right of return’ on both an emotional and political level. This has a very important cultural significance in insuring that their rights to a homeland are not forgotten and the hope of going back remains alive … but what happens in the mean time?


Dream Project: in context

Palestinians refugee in Lebanon are limited by the lack of opportunities (such as living within the dense urban sprawl, inability to own land or build in the refugee camps and the denial of Palestinian employment in more than 72 skilled and unskilled professions in Lebanon (in 2003) and the belief that their futures are elsewhere, in Palestine or other parts of the world. As a result of immigration, the children’s dreams are loaded with history, often connected to a romanticised image of Palestine: they want to be farmers that return to farm their lands or soldiers that will liberate it. Occasionally they will relate to social power positions such as professionalism. Dreams of becoming doctors or teachers are common especially when they are young as it will allow them to imagine clearly and practically how they can change what they cannot change currently. However, these dreams often fade as they grow older and are filled with the knowledge of economic and legal obstacles towards getting there… the Dream Project aims to address personal dreaming because it can have a positive impact on their present situation in Lebanon as well as their futures in general. This is particularly relevant with regards to their commitments towards searching for these dreams and believing that they are possible to achieve. This project aims to address the possibilities, to show that small-scale participation and expressions (that are enjoyable and creative) can really be effective in improving the every day life conditions around them.

As such the project aims to encourage the belief in dreaming through the investigation of the process of (de/re)-constructing our ‘dreams so as to unravel them into separate ingredients that can be expressed and visualised in several ways that initiate endless ideas that make us see our dreams as an ongoing process that takes place all the time, and not merely as something in the future that is definitive and grand.

The Dream Project—or process of unravelling ‘dreams’—was investigated in two consecutive workshops, each concerned with a different aspect and scale of ‘dreaming’; the first is a personal exploration, the second is a spatial and social one.

Dream Project 1: I want to be … – oreed an akoon …
Dream Project 2: Dream Space – hilmak meen bisa3

Burj El Barajneh camp in Beirut, Lebanon.


back to Dream Project 1 home page

Dream Project 1: I want to be … – oreed an akoon …
Date: 2003Location: Burj El BarajneCollaborative  team: Dalal Abed El Rahman, Iman Bekdash, Lilas Bitar, Salah Hamza,  Sirine Kalash, Racha Najdi, Lucine Sarhan.Partners:  If-Untitled Architecture, Beit Atfal Assoumoud, Ghassan Kanafani  Cultural Foundation and Association Najdeh, Beirut Theatre. 
 
“I want to be”,  was the first part of the Dream project. It explored the personal  future visions of each child, especially in relation to their careers or  ‘things they want to be’ when they are ‘grown ups’.
The project  focused on the ‘time frame’ and ‘scale’ of the dreams, employing  practical, creative and technical skills of ‘making’ with the aim of  testing them and understanding them better. The children fragmented the  ingredients of their dreams through a series of mindmaps (written,  remembered and drawn); the fragments were then edited and  re-arranged/re-assembled innovatively different ways of seeing or  experiencing the original dreams. These were expressed through personal  performances composed of dream costumes (dream robes—3D sculptural robes  that are worn or attached to the body) and narratives accompanied by  projections, choreography and music.
Friends and family were invited to the public performance to share the process and outcome of the dream investigation.

the project was followed by Dream Project 2: Dream Space – hilmak meen bisa3

back to Dream Project 1 home page

Dream Project 1: I want to be … – oreed an akoon …


Date: 2003
Location: Burj El Barajne
Collaborative team: Dalal Abed El Rahman, Iman Bekdash, Lilas Bitar, Salah Hamza, Sirine Kalash, Racha Najdi, Lucine Sarhan.
Partners: If-Untitled Architecture, Beit Atfal Assoumoud, Ghassan Kanafani Cultural Foundation and Association Najdeh, Beirut Theatre.

 

“I want to be”, was the first part of the Dream project. It explored the personal future visions of each child, especially in relation to their careers or ‘things they want to be’ when they are ‘grown ups’.

The project focused on the ‘time frame’ and ‘scale’ of the dreams, employing practical, creative and technical skills of ‘making’ with the aim of testing them and understanding them better. The children fragmented the ingredients of their dreams through a series of mindmaps (written, remembered and drawn); the fragments were then edited and re-arranged/re-assembled innovatively different ways of seeing or experiencing the original dreams. These were expressed through personal performances composed of dream costumes (dream robes—3D sculptural robes that are worn or attached to the body) and narratives accompanied by projections, choreography and music.

Friends and family were invited to the public performance to share the process and outcome of the dream investigation.

the project was followed by Dream Project 2: Dream Space – hilmak meen bisa3


back to Dream Project 1 home page

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Burj el Barajneh Palestinian refugee camp, Lebanon