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6 | Liquidation | Meira Asher

6 | Liquidation | Meira Asher

Released Wednesday, 29th May 2024
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6 | Liquidation | Meira Asher

6 | Liquidation | Meira Asher

6 | Liquidation | Meira Asher

6 | Liquidation | Meira Asher

Wednesday, 29th May 2024
Good episode? Give it some love!
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Liquidation | Meira Asher

There is currently a structural water crisis in the Palestinian Occupied Jordan Valley. Not a climate or geographical water crisis, a deliberate socially and politically engineered crisis. Israel, since it invaded the West Bank in 1967, controls every public aspect of civilian life in the Jordan Valley. Israel administers two populations, the Israeli settlers and the indigenous Palestinian residents. Israel deliberately and strategically deprives Palestinian farming communities of access to fresh, clean and reliable water supplies, water that is needed for crops and herds, as well as for the Palestinian farmers and herders.

This can mean either not permitting them to be connected to municipal water supplies, despite the Israeli settlers having such access. It also entails not permitting Palestinian people to sink new wells on their own land, and blocking their access to existing wells and springs, either by fencing off the water source or destroying pipes bringing the water to the herders and farmers. The end result is frequently that either the farmers have to pay extortionate prices to purchase water from the Palestinian authority, or if they cannot afford this option they are forced to abandon their land and way of life.

Featuring the water truck driver, co-activists Natasha and Nitsan, shepherds community of Khalet Makhul, shepherd ‘W’, shepherds community of Hirbet Samra and Aref Daragmah.

Translation from Arabic: Laila Abd El-RazaqIntroductory

text: Liam Evans

~ Meira Asher is a composer, performer and Human Rights activist. She primarily uses the medium of Sound-art and Radio-art. Graduate of CalArts and KonCon, she was co-founder of the ‘bodylab art foundation’ with Guy Harries (2001-11) where they produced several projects including Infantry and Woman See Lot of Things. Former lecturer at Haifa university's Art School (2012-2022) and producer of the independent Radio-art show radioart106 since 2014.  Her works were released on Crammed, Sub Rosa, Auditorium, Raash Records and Ultima Ratio labels. Her recent works include Antonin Artaud’s radio essay To Have Done with the Judgement of God, Sonic Voyage of Resistance for Radio Art Zone 2022, and the Catastrophe trilogy by duo Asher.Zax featuring Dave Phillips, Ensemble Musica Nova, and more.

meiraasher.bandcamp.com
soundcloud.com/radioart106
instagram: @meira.asher @radioart106

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From The Podcast

RadioActive - on Water

RadioActive - on Water is a six episode podcast series, exploring the interactions between transmission, sound, activism and water. Each episode is created by a different artist/group of artists who engage with water politics and the politics of listening through the medium of radio. Curated by: Meira Asher and Stephen Shiell Production - Meira Asher, radioart106 Mastering - Daniel Meir Website design - Laetitiia Boulud ‘An Ear to River ~ counterflows’ by Blanc Sceol (Stephen Shiell & Hannah White) invites the audience to listen with the Channelsea river, a recovering waterway in East London and home to the city’s largest combined sewage outfall. ‘River song, singing rivers’ by Lisa Blackmore and Leonel Vásquez, navigates the Bogotá River in Colombia through a more-than-human song created in collaboration with the living forces that shape the watershed’s ecosystems. ‘Watered ’ by RE-PEAT collective approaches water justice through imagining the perspective of water nself, by drawing stories and definitions of bodies of water, and n's entanglement in relation with other bodies, bogs, bugs, sundew, moss and more. ‘Sonic Traces’ by Margarida Mendes, is a journey from the deep ocean to the Mississippi river, to expose how traces of pollution, sonic and chemical, travel through watery space impacting communities across ecosystems. ‘River Breathing’ by Carlos Monleon and Nathaniel Mann, examines the impact of irrigation systems on human and more-than-human communities through the Ebro river in Spain and its endangered clam population. ‘Liquidation’ by Meira Asher interrogates the politically engineered water crisis in the Occupied Palestinian Jordan Valley where Israel deliberately and strategically deprives Palestinian shepherd communities of access to water.~ Water and radio have similarities in how they transmit—via waves and currents—seeping through matter to cross boundaries, and traverse cultural, political and social divides. They remind us of our fragility and impermanence with their ability to shape-shift and expand. The white noise of the gushing waterfall or radio static can both elucidate auditory hallucinations. Composers such as Annea Lockwood and Pauline Oliveros explore these phenomena in their works, inviting us to listen to water in new ways. The control of water, as a vital component of all life, creates conflict and struggle across the globe. Listening underwater was first made possible by Marie "Bobbie" Dennis Poland Fish who developed the hydrophone for the US navy, to differentiate between submarine sounds and marine life. ‘Liquidation’, uncovers the devastating effects of a restricted water supply on Palestinians, and ‘River Breathing’ considers the unequal distribution of water resources for leisure, farming and ecosystem survival. ‘Sonic Traces’ ‘River song, singing rivers’ and ‘An Ear to River ~ counterflows’ all examine the effects of neo-liberal infrastructure, contamination and colonial legacies. 'Waterbody' seeks to manifest the layers of water justice from the perspective of liquid places themselves. Listening with water can inspire and initiate action to protect our shared water systems. The air waves offer a shared space of watery resilience, a “hydro-acoustic-commons”, to add an auditory dimension to Astrida Neimanis’ term for a more embodied approach to water management. All episodes open up a sensory portal to the diverse methods being used around the world to tackle the challenges posed by the Anthropocene. The series has the potential to foster what Daniela Medina Epoch calls "aqualiteracy" - a recognition of the caring relationship with waters as living beings and an understanding of the constant dialogue between all bodies in constant exchange.RadioActive - on Water was produced with the support of the Pais council for Culture and Art, Israel.

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