Cultural event organized for peace in Palestine

Cultural event organized for peace in Palestine
▲ Editor and poet Hermann Bellinghausen read a poem by Mahmud Darwish at the Juárez Hemicycle, where an "anti-monument" against the genocide in Gaza was unveiled. Photo by Jair Cabrera Torres
Daniel López Aguilar
La Jornada Newspaper, Sunday, August 17, 2025, p. 3
The Juárez Hemicycle was the scene yesterday of a cultural event in support of peace and Palestinian autonomy.
Members of the Latin American Alliance for Palestine Against Apartheid held the second and final day of the National Meeting of Solidarity with Palestine and the Peoples Resisting Zionism, with a program that combined words, installations, and music in front of dozens of young people and adults.
The event began at 3:30 p.m. with the reading of the political declaration, followed by a statement in honor of the Al Jazeera journalists killed in Gaza. Among the attendees were chants such as: "Enough of the genocide!" and "Supporting Palestine is supporting Mexico!" Young artists intervened in the metal structures surrounding the monument, painting them in the red, green, white, and black of the Mexican flag.
Posters with messages such as "Stop the genocide!", "Defending Gaza is defending humanity," and "Neutrality is complicity with the genocide perpetrator" were also distributed, and petition drives were launched demanding the severance of diplomatic relations with Israel.
One of the spokespersons noted that the works they intervene in are often erased, but that the collective would reinstall them as many times as necessary. "If this happens for the 40th time, we'll do it again," he stated, highlighting the persistence of the act in the face of injustice and neglect.
The reading of a poem by Mahmud Darwish (1941-2008), led by editor and poet Hermann Bellinghausen, was one of the most symbolic moments of the event. “This author was an internal refugee and constant migrant; he was imprisoned in his youth,” he said before reciting: “Two birds are speaking above us / Shoot the enemy / What have you done with my mother’s coffee / What was my crime? / You will never be free of me / He embraces his murderer.”
Under a bright sun, an "anti-monument" was unveiled: the fragmented silhouette of Palestine, emblazoned with the phrase "From the river to the sea, Palestine will triumph. Stop the genocide!" The organizers emphasized that these large-scale installations are strategically placed to demand justice, confront indifference, and keep open the wounds of unresolved historical and contemporary events.
Among the dozens in attendance, Alma Calderón, a visual arts student, commented in an interview: “This is the first time I've attended something like this, and I felt that poetry and art allow me to understand stories that are often silenced. I'm not entirely familiar with the situation in Palestine, but I'll research it further.”
For his part, businessman Mario Herrera commented: "Mexico has always been a brother to countries in need, like Palestine. This type of event makes us see reality and prevents us from being indifferent."
To the sound of pre-Hispanic conch shells, used to "invoke good omens and ask forgiveness from Mother Earth," the activity concluded with music by singer Nidia Barajas, Julia Castillo, Andrea Murga, and the artistic collective El Cerrojo.
Today, Carlos Adriel Salmerón opens the Bellas Artes Concert Gala.
Merry MacMasters
La Jornada Newspaper, Sunday, August 17, 2025, p. 3
The third Bellas Artes Concert Performers Gala today presents a tour of the different facets of Mexican music, from that composed during the Porfiriato to the current, recently premiered, reported pianist Carlos Adriel Salmerón Arroyo, who will open the program with Près du Ruisseau ( Along the Stream ), a work written by Ricardo Castro (1864-1907) from Durango in Paris, when the Mexican government awarded him a scholarship to perfect his musical training in France between 1903 and 1906.
In the City of Light, Castro met Venezuelan pianist Teresa Carreño. After taking a few lessons with her, he dedicated a work to her that "speaks to this era in which French culture influenced Mexican art in many ways, and music was no exception," explained Salmerón Arroyo. In "Près du Ruisseau ," there are "evocations of water, of the image that its sound and aquatic movement can leave, something inherited from the Romantic tradition, a movement to which Castro belonged, albeit later."
For the pianist, given the "eclectic" nature of the Romantic movement, it is "difficult to pigeonhole it into anything, but a certain emotionality toward the individual is always present. There are many evocations of the past and recurring themes such as love and death." However, Castro's work "is already beginning to be read with certain overtones close to what would later be called Impressionism. That is, this way of portraying, through music, impressions or images. It is not strictly Impressionist, although it is already at that stage where Romanticism begins to give way to other horizons."
He added that Près du Ruisseau was included in the third Gala because it is part of a program that will be presented on August 29 at the Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla, which is a retrospective of works that have been composed for "the great pianists of history, such as Therese Jansen, Marie Pleyel, Tatiana Nikolayeva, and the Mexicans María Teresa Rodríguez, Angélica Morales, Alicia de Larrocha and María Teresa Frenk.
Salmerón Arroyo also participates in the second work on the program, which consists of concert versions of well-known Mexican music, such as the waltz Sobre las olas by Juventino Rosas, the song Somos novios by Armando Manzanero, and Granada by Agustín Lara, with arrangements made by Manuel Ramos, in which “both the violin and the piano exploit all their technical and sound possibilities, in the manner of the concert fantasies that were already being made on opera arias since the 19th century. In this case they are based on music very close to the hearts of Mexicans.”
The first part of the program, "tells us about a Mexico more closely linked to the tradition of romanticism and popular song," concludes with a selection of songs by María Greever (1885-1951), performed by tenor René Velázquez and pianist Claudio Herrera.
The second part will feature a more modern Mexico that "presents us with different avant-garde movements and ways of approaching modernity." It will open with Quintet for Clarinet and String Quartet by Joaquín Gutiérrez Heras (1927-2012), a composer "still little explored in Mexico, possessing a very personal style, inherited from French composers like Ravel, who exerted a great influence on his music. He is not a composer who has written a lot of music; however, every work he composed is of the highest quality and care." The Bellas Artes Wind Quintet will participate in this piece.
Pianist María Teresa Frenk will premiere Preludes, Series III by Leonardo Coral (1962). The concert will conclude with Momo by Eugenio Toussaint (1954-2011), a work inspired by the novel of the same name by Michael Ende. “Toussaint was a renowned jazz musician, but he had this classical compositional side that somehow reveals his knowledge of jazz through the harmonies he uses, although always in an avant-garde language sometimes linked to minimalism or a certain neoclassicism,” notes Salmerón Arroyo. Momo will also be performed by the Bellas Artes Wind Quintet.
The performance will be today at 5 p.m. in the main hall of the Palace of Fine Arts.
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