Click on the Manage Content for adding and managing content.
Click on the Rotator Settings and choose what and how it will be displayed.

On Iran’s islands, an intriguing portrait carries new meaning

Kraig Pakulski 0 29 Article rating: No rating

By Adam Pourahmadi, CNN

(CNN) — Salimeh stands in her yard, a rug suspended behind her, still heavy from washing. Her clothes, patterned in vivid reds, pinks and oranges, echo the mineral-rich sands of Iran’s Qeshm and Hormuz islands, where the earth itself seems to glow. The wind lifts her veil, just enough to show its gentle presence, and it billows out across her body. She’s caught, mid-motion, in the exact moment of its arrival.

Photographer Hoda Afshar recalls the image as something almost accidental. Working with a medium-format analog camera, she had been adjusting, focusing, waiting. Salimeh stood patiently. Then the wind came and she pressed the shutter.

Afshar has been returning to Iran’s southern islands of Hormuz and Qeshm since 2015, photographing the land, its residents and the invisible, esoteric forces that shape life there — the winds, which locals believe to be powerful entities.

Their belief runs through the islands like an undercurrent. Some winds are considered benign; others harmful. One type of wind known as zār, can, they say, enter the body and cause distress or illness.

In Afshar’s portrait, Salimeh’s mask, painted with thick eyebrows and a mustache, is part of that belief. It is meant to deceive the spirits, to make her appear male. Women, it is believed, are more vulnerable to the zār.

The photo featured in Afshar’s 2021 book, “Speak the Wind” – one of dozens of images shaped by the tension between the visible and the invisible, landscape and memory, and the body and the forces said to move through it.

Some five years later, amid a war between the US, Israel, and Iran, these islands dotted across the Strait of Hormuz are caught in a different kind of bluster. Warships, an ongoing US blockade, and Iranian mines scattered in the sea now threaten the waters around the islands of Hormuz and Qeshm, placing communities long shaped by trade and migration at the center of a global crisis.

In a video call from Berlin, where she is currently on an artist residency, Afshar describes the islanders off the coast of Iran as “some of the most hospitable and cheerful people I know,” so deeply tied to the land that even a day away leaves them “restless and ill.”

Afshar’s family still lives on Qeshm. In the first week of the war, Iran said a US-Israeli strike hit a desalination plant on the island – a vital lifeline in an already water-scarce region. From afar, she hears fragments of what daily life has become: the heavy military presence, the bombings that, as she said one relative put it, “cut through your body like an earthquake.”

Her images feel newly charged in this context, poetic portraits unfolding in a landscape now threatened by war.

The region’s beliefs around the winds have long historical roots, she explained.

For centuries, these islands have been at the crossroads of empires, trade routes and cultures. Iranian, Arab and European powers have all laid claim to them. Their shores have received merchants, soldiers and migrants moving between East Africa, the Arabian Peninsula, and the Indian subcontinent.

With them came languages, customs, and beliefs.

That history, passed through oral memory, remains embedded in the cultural fabric of the islands, she said. She explained that many residents are of African descent, though that identity is frequently obscured or denied, shaped by longstanding social hierarchies.

Within the zār belief, those same histories are inverted. The only people believed capable of negotiating with the possessing winds, of restoring balance, are shamans of African descent. In ritual gatherings, music, incense and movement create a space where the unseen becomes, briefly, tangible.

For Afshar, “Speak the Wind” was about tracing how landscape, history and the body shape one another.

“You see how the connection peo

Prep scores for beach volleyball, baseball, softball, lacrosse, and golf

Kraig Pakulski 0 28 Article rating: No rating
DOWNEY DP BEACH CIF.00_00_14_15.Still001
Chargers advance to second round of CIF-SS playoffs

SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (KEYT) -

CIF-SS High School Girls Beach Volleyball First Round Playoffs:

Division 3: Dos Pueblos 4, Downing 1: Chargers are at Camarillo on Thursday in second round.

Division 4: Bishop Diego 4, Costa Mesa 1: Cardinals play at Pacifica Christian on Thursday in second round

High School Baseball:

Rio Mesa 2, Dos Pueblos 0

Oxnard 5, Ventura 4

High School Softball:

San Marcos 8, Pacifica 1

High School Boys Lacrosse:

Santa Barbara 20, San Marcos 2: Dons share Channel League title with Dos Pueblos

High School Girls Lacrosse:

San Marcos 15, Santa Barbara 2: 30 straight league victories for Royals

High School Boys Golf:

San Marcos 339, Ventura 368

Santa Barbara 403, Pacifica 459

Bishop Diego 205, Grace 218: Cardinals repeat as Tri-Valley League champions

The post Prep scores for beach volleyball, baseball, softball, lacrosse, and golf appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

Prep scores for beach volleyball, baseball, softball, lacrosse, and golf

Kraig Pakulski 0 26 Article rating: No rating
DOWNEY DP BEACH CIF.00_00_14_15.Still001
Chargers advance to second round of CIF-SS playoffs

SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (KEYT) -

CIF-SS High School Girls Beach Volleyball First Round Playoffs:

Division 3: Dos Pueblos 4, Downing 1: Chargers are at Camarillo on Thursday in second round.

Division 4: Bishop Diego 4, Costa Mesa 1: Cardinals play at Pacifica Christian on Thursday in second round

High School Baseball:

Rio Mesa 2, Dos Pueblos 0

Oxnard 5, Ventura 4

High School Softball:

San Marcos 8, Pacifica 1

High School Boys Lacrosse:

Santa Barbara 20, San Marcos 2: Dons share Channel League title with Dos Pueblos

High School Girls Lacrosse:

San Marcos 15, Santa Barbara 2: 30 straight league victories for Royals

High School Boys Golf:

San Marcos 339, Ventura 368

Santa Barbara 403, Pacifica 459

Bishop Diego 205, Grace 218: Cardinals repeat as Tri-Valley League champions

The post Prep scores for beach volleyball, baseball, softball, lacrosse, and golf appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

Man accused of killing 3 people in Atlanta-area attacks dies in custody

Kraig Pakulski 0 22 Article rating: No rating

By Karina Tsui, CNN

(CNN) — A man accused of killing three people, including a Department of Homeland Security employee, in a shooting spree across several Atlanta suburbs last week died in custody, authorities said Tuesday.

Olaolukitan Adon Abel, 26, was found unresponsive in his jail cell at around 6:48 p.m. Tuesday. Detention staff tried to save him, but he was pronounced dead about half an hour later, Dekalb County Sheriff’s Office said in a statement.

“There is no indication of criminal activity or foul play,” the statement read, adding that the official cause of death will be determined by the medical examiner’s office. An internal review has been initiated to examine the circumstances of his death, in accordance with agency policy.

Adon Abel, a native of the United Kingdom granted US citizenship in 2022, was suspected of shooting 31-year-old Prianna Weathers, 48-year-old Tony Matthews, and 40-year-old Lauren Bullis, within hours on April 13, becoming one of the latest immigration cases thrust into the national spotlight by the Trump administration.

Weathers, a mother to a preteen, and Bullis, the DHS employee, died from their injuries shortly after being shot. Matthews, a father with a growing family, was hospitalized for six days until he died on April 19.

Police said Weathers, the first victim, was fatally injured with multiple gunshot wounds near a restaurant in the Decatur area around 1 a.m. on April 13.

About an hour later in Brookhaven, another Atlanta suburb north of Decatur, Matthews was shot multiple times outside of a grocery store. Police previously said Matthews was unhoused, but his family said he wasn’t, clarifying he didn’t have his ID when he was found.

Hours later, before 7 a.m., Bullis was shot and stabbed while walking her dog in Panthersville – an unincorporated community south of Decatur. A dedicated DHS employee and “consummate professional,” Bullis was “committed to public service,” read her obituary.

Suspect faced multiple charges

Authorities said they suspected Adon Abel based on surveillance footage and license plate readers. He was taken into custody on April 13, the same day as the shootings, during a traffic stop in Troup County, which borders Alabama and was charged with two counts of malice murder aggravated assault and a firearms count.

After Matthews’ death, police said they would seek another charge of malice murder.

Adon Abel was also facing federal firearms charges in connection to the purchase of a 9 mm handgun allegedly found at the scene where Bullis was killed, according to the Justice Department.

Tracing analysis connected the firearm found to Damon Marquis Yarns, a homeless man who allegedly told authorities he purchased a firearm for a man he identified in a photo array as Adon Abel, the Justice Department said. Yarns also faces federal firearms charges.

During a search of Adon Abel’s vehicle, Georgia State Patrol troopers found a box of 9 mm ammunition and shell casings matching the brand of ammunition found at the scene where Bullis was killed, the department added.

Authorities have said they believe at least one of the victims, the man who was wounded, was targeted at random. They said they were still looking into whether the other two victims were also picked randomly.

Adon Abel had a criminal record that included a sexual battery conviction, according to Homeland Secretary Markwayne Mullin, though he didn’t say w

Jacarandas in Bloom in Santa Barbara

Kraig Pakulski 0 26 Article rating: No rating

SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (KEYT) Jacaranda trees are in bloom.

The purple flowers line many streets in Santa Barbara, including Carrillo.

It looks like purple rain when the flower petals start to fall.

The petals cover sidewalks and cars.

One tree near Santa Barbara City Hall is shedding flowers in the parking lot.

Love them or hate them, the blooms only last a couple of weeks.

The post Jacarandas in Bloom in Santa Barbara appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

RSS
First18801881188218831885188718881889Last