Showing posts with label Buildings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Buildings. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 8, 2020

Felician Sisters, Mississauga


Felician Sisters, Mississauga
Image Source: Mississauga.ca


We drive by a long, slightly winding driveway. The last time we drove by it, I managed to write down the nearest number to the road: 2185 Mississauga Road.

On Google Map, the Felician Sisters is located near this area, and looking them up, they are at 2165 Mississauga Rd.

Most of these side roads show homes on either side, but this one has an intriguing absence of anything but the trail and tall trees on either side.

Here is a little background on this convent (text below from mississauga.ca, and images screenshots from google map):
2165 Mississauga Road North. Range 3, CIR, pt. Lot 10.

This is a two-and-a-half storey structure built as an English country estate in English Tudor Manor style. It was designed by architects George and Moorhouse in 1938 and originally known as the William George Dean residence. (William George Dean was a director of Eaton's.) The building later became a convent for the Felician Sisters of St. Francis Canada. It is not visible from the road. There is a carriage house attached to the east side and a modern addition to the west. There was a small cemetery on the property where about seven of the sisters were buried. Sometime before 2004 six of the sisters' bodies were moved, without the knowledge of the Registrar of Cemeteries, and reinterred in Assumption Cemetery. It is possible that there are still some burials on the property. The property is listed on the Heritage Register. Description as of July 2018.

Agency: Mississauga Library System
And more here:
Felician Sisters of St. Francis Canada Convent & Cemetery, Erindale
Date Built: 1938
Subject: Historic buildings - Ontario - Erindale (Mississauga)
Location: 2165 Mississauga Road North, pt. Lot 10, Range 3 CIR



Tuesday, July 7, 2020

Red Door Canopy


Red Door Canopy
Port Credit, ON
[Photo By: KPA]

Sunday, March 3, 2019

Reflection


Mississauga City Hall and Ice Skating Rink
[Photo By: KPAk]


2 Corinthians 3:18
But we all, with unveiled face seeing by reflection the glory of Lord, are transformed into the same likeness from glory to glory, just as from the Spirit of Lord.

Thursday, November 22, 2018

Beauty and Aesthetics Matter Quite a Bit


Church of the Holy Innocents
128 West 37th Street
New York




Ms. Asrat,

I really enjoy your blog. It’s changed how I think and that doesn’t happen
every day. I’ve begun drawing and pl[a]ying music again after a long hiatus
because you’ve convinced me that beauty and aesthetics do matter, and they
matter quite a bit. I’ve been back in school for civil engineering for a
year now, I was hoping to find out what makes these people tick, these
people who make these hideous things, and to see if there was anything I
could do about it.

[...]

Have you been to a traditional Latin high mass at the Church of the Holy
Innocents in Midtown Manhattan?

Thanks for making so much grist for the mill,

D...

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Dear D...

Thanks so much for your encouraging words. Yes beauty and aesthetics matter quite a bit!

[...]

I haven't been to the Church of the Holy Innocents, although I am sure I have walked past it. I'm sure I remember seeing the beautiful exterior and walking up to have a closer look. And the name sounds very familiar.

[...]

Keep up the studies. Despite all the ugly buildings, there is a wealth of information available through schools and libraries, and we can make our own creations. Don't be discouraged by the direction your professors will undoubtedly take, which is to teach you how to build those ugly buildings (you might even get some Fs!). But once you're done, you can forge ahead and build those beautiful buildings.

Happy Thanksgiving!

Kidist

Friday, October 26, 2018

Mississauga City Hall Clock Tower: Fall Time


Mississauga City Hall Clock Tower: Fall Time
[Photo By: KPA]

Thursday, October 25, 2018

The Broken Promise of Fields

There was a time when fields were a good thing, a place where nature was allowed to bloom in all its glory.

I took these images of the M-City developments now in full progress along Webb Drive, in Mississauga. These empty fields held some promise at one time, of flowers and grass and even trees. Now they are deserted lots, which make them good candidates for development.

Now, the only promise we can expect from them is some apocalyptic design of strange narrow high rises which look like they will topple down at a mere hint of a breeze.




















Webb Drive Development Strip
Mississauga
[Photos By: KPA]

Monday, October 15, 2018

C-Cafe Circles


C-Cafe Circles
[Photo By: KPA]


Coffee at the Mississauga Civic Centre's C-Cafe with a different view of the giant circles.

C-Cafe Lights


C-Cafe Lights
[Photo By: KPA]


This is the dramatic interior of the C-Cafe in Mississauga, which is inside the Civic Centre.

Daily soup's by skilled chefs and coffee directly from Starbucks.

Thursday, June 14, 2018

Gauging the Wind's Direction


Mississauga Civic Centre Clock Tower
Designed as a Windmill
[Photo By: [KPA]

Saturday, February 10, 2018

Early Morning on the Upper West Side



Early Morning on the Upper West Side (110th St)
March 2017
[Photo By: KPA]

Early Morning on the Upper West Side


Early Morning on the Upper West Side (110th St)
March 2017
[Photo By: KPA]

Friday, February 2, 2018

Shadowing Lincoln Center


Shadowing Lincoln Center
[Photo By: KPA
2017]

Monday, February 27, 2017

Window Lights


[Photo By: KPA]

Tuesday, June 2, 2015

Positively 44th Street



I first came upon West 44th street between 5th and 6th Avenues in 2009 when I went to New York and Princeton to participate in my first anti-Jihad event. I met the (now dormant) International Free Press Society's Bjorn Larsen outside the Harvard Club, where there was a private luncheon for Muhammad Cartoonist Kurt Westergaard. A small group of us, including Bjorn, Lars Hedegaard (who was at one time after this event confined to his house in his native Holland to protect him from Muslim antagonists for his negative commentary on Muslim immigrants), Paul Belien of the Brussels Journal, and Westergaard traveled to Princeton University for a presentations by Westergaard, and later that evening, to attend a private reception for Westergaard at a mid-town New York apartment. The day after the event in Princeton, I met Larry Auster for the first time, at The Red Flame Diner in New York on 44th Street. I had been communicating with Larry for a few years as a commentator on his website The View From the Right.

Below is an interesting article about this one-block strip, with its various intellectual and literary clubs. One is the Alogonquin Hotel, where the infamous Round Table met. I went inside the restaurant on another trip, to see the menu, and realized that I could afford one item (say the shrimp cocktail for $20). I also mentioned the prestigious Harvard Club after visit in that block in 2012.

It is amazing that so much happened (and happens) in such a tiny, hidden, part of New York.

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Waiting on The Algonquin
[Photo By: KPA]


Positively 44th Street
By: Alex Shoumatoff
Vanity Fair
June 12, 2014

Room 2806, the presidential suite in the Sofitel at 45 West 44th Street, goes for $3,000 a night, which is not out of line for a suite in Midtown Manhattan. The Mandarin Oriental on Columbus Circle has one for $18,000. But three grand is a lot more than the seedy Hotel Seymour, which occupied the Sofitel site until being demolished in 1983, used to charge for a room. The Seymour was one of the three welfare or S.R.O. (single-room occupancy) hotels, as they were also called, on the block—44th between Fifth and Sixth—where retired theater people had been living for years at reduced rates. In the 70s, I remember, I met one Broadway widow—a heavily rouged woman in her 80s who smoked cigarettes through a long black holder and called me “Dahling,” à la Tallulah Bankhead—at the Teheran, the bar down the block from the Seymour that everybody went to after work; it, too, is gone. The two other residential hotels were the Royalton, at 44 West 44th, and the Mansfield, at 12 West 44th, which were both renovated in the late 80s and 90s when the Times Square district was “Disneyfied,” as critics called the process. They are both now boutique hotels, though not as luxurious or pricey as the haute Euro Sofitel.

The Royalton was resurrected in 1988 by the hotelier Ian Schrager. In 1992 he brought in the downtown restaurateur Brian McNally, who had opened a string of hot spots the previous decade, including Indochine, the Odeon, and Canal Bar, to run its restaurant. McNally made the restaurant—called Forty Four—and the Royalton’s Philippe Starck-designed lobby the place to eat and meet and be seen, particularly for the literati, as the Algonquin Hotel across the street had been 60 years before, when the roués of the Round Table had their famous drunken luncheons there.

On May 14 of last year, between 12:07 and 12:13 p.m., Room 2806 in the Sofitel acquired a place in the annals of tawdriness and in the rich social history of the block, when Dominique Strauss-Kahn, the managing director of the International Monetary Fund, who was leading the polls for France’s forthcoming presidential election, had a hurried sexual encounter with the Guinean housemaid Nafissatou Diallo as he was preparing to vacate the suite. The circumstances—whether it was consensual or an assault—are disputed, but after Strauss-Kahn was taken off a plane to Paris later that day and imprisoned on Rikers Island on charges that were later dropped because of issues with Ms. Diallo’s credibility, a female journalist in France came forth with a similar account of having been attacked by D.S.K. eight years earlier. His career at the I.M.F. and his French presidential aspirations were finished.

If anyone on the block was scandalized by this bit of Euro-loucheness, it would have been farther down toward Fifth Avenue, in the stately neo-Georgian Harvard Club, at 35 West 44th, and next door in the beguiling Beaux Arts New York Yacht Club, at 37, whose windows look like they were plucked from a galleon. But it would be a bit of a stretch for these bastions of the old East Coast Wasp imperium, or what is left of it, to feel like their escutcheons had been besmirched. They probably don’t bear much scrutiny themselves these days, the noblesse oblige and ethos of service and stewardship of the old blueblood ruling class having been hemorrhaging since the presidency of Nixon and being, at this point, pretty much gone. Plus, this block has seen it all. The illicit trysts that have taken place on it would be impossible to chronicle. Back in the 20s, the playwright George Kaufman, who was a member of the Round Table and one of the progenitors of situation comedy, ran into an old flame in the elevator of the Algonquin Hotel, on the arm of a new beau, whom she introduced as being “in cotton,” and he came out with a memorable one-liner: “And them that plants ’em is soon forgotten.”


Inside the Algonquin, 1986
By Peter Freed/The New York Times

(From the online slideshow on Vanity Fair's June 2012 article Positively 44th Street)

Many completely different worlds, many different cultures, networks, and scenes coexist on this one block of West 44th Street. You could spend your life trying to find out what happened and what is happening along this 250-yard stretch of pavement and not begin to scratch the surface. Its baseline component is the local Midtown culture, which is New York melting pot flavored with the flimflam of Tin Pan Alley and Times Square, both within spitting distance. In fact, the Hippodrome, the largest and most successful theater in New York in the first part of the 20th century, was right on the southeast corner of 44th and Sixth Avenue. Before that it was a carriage house and stable for the trotting horses of wealthy sportsmen of the Vanderbilt-Rockefeller set. Houdini made a five-ton elephant disappear before a crowd of more than 5,000 at the Hippodrome. The site today is occupied by a nondescript glass office tower.

But the indigenous Midtown culture is still alive and well, I was glad to find, in the arcade of the old New Yorker building, which runs from 28 West 44th Street to 25 West 43rd Street. From 1935 until 1991, The New Yorker magazine had its “Dickensian” offices, as they were invariably called, on the 18th, 19th, and 20th floors of this building (which was then known as the National Association Building). I had one of them when I was a staff writer at the magazine, from 1978 to 1990. It was tiny and spartan, with just enough room for a table and a chair, a bookshelf, and an ancient black Royal typewriter probably used by its previous tenant, a revered “fact” editor and reporter named St. Clair McKelway, whose demise had made it available. (A tall man who mumbled in his mustache and was given to bouts of paranoia, McKelway, who served as a public-relations officer for the military on Guam in 1944, is most remembered for firing off a telegram to the Pentagon accusing Admiral Chester Nimitz, the commander of the Pacific Fleet in World War II, of high treason.) “Fact” was the quirky New Yorker term for journalism, as opposed to fiction. It avoided being defined by what it wasn’t: nonfiction.

The arcade of the National Association Building was like a little self-contained global village where your basic necessities were taken care of. There was a barber, a tailor, a coffee shop, a newsstand, a watch-repair shop, even a post office. To me this arcade is the very omphalos—the navel—of Gotham. The guy at the Arcade Hair Styling Salon for Men and Women who cut my hair 30 years ago is still there, I noticed when I was passing through at the beginning of last December. His name is Aldo Nestico and he’s 67 now. Half a dozen old-timers, longtime customers from the neighborhood, were sitting in the salon’s waiting section in Miami Beach leisure suits. One of them was wearing a loud plaid golf cap. None of them looked like they particularly needed a haircut. But I did, my last cut being a three-dollar job in Borneo three months earlier. I booked a cut with Aldo for the following afternoon.

Aldo came over from Calabria in 1955 on the Andrea Doria, a year before it went down, “or I wouldn’t be here,” as he points out. He has cut a lot of famous people’s hair, including the Beatles’. But the guy with the stories, with the gift of gab, is snipping away at the next chair—Andreas Pavlou, who has been cutting hair in the neighborhood since 1964 and is originally from Cyprus. Having a captive audience who is all ears, he uncorks the following classic New York yarn.

‘It was around this time of year many years ago, a few weeks before Christmas. I am finishing a haircut at the shop across the street and suddenly the guy starts sweating and it’s cold outside and I says to him, ‘You don’t look so good. Maybe we should call an ambulance,’ and he says, ‘I’m O.K. I’m just coming down with a cold. I’m going to go home and kill my wife for giving me this virus.’ But when he gets up he starts staggering and asks if he can sit on the couch for a minute, and while he is lying there on his side he has a heart attack. I call an ambulance and by the time it arrives the guy is dead. The paramedic gives him CPR, but it’s no use. It’s 11 in the morning and everybody is starting to come. The paramedic says, ‘I have to leave him here so the police can come and make sure you didn’t do it.’ I says, ‘You can’t do that. It’ll be the end of my business.’ So we sit him up on the couch and cross his legs and put a New York Times in his hands and spread it out so nobody can see he’s dead. All day long customers come and sit right next to him and nobody notices. At five o’clock a huge guy comes and sits on the couch, and the corpse slumps over onto him, and I says to the corpse, ‘Look, if you want to take a nap, why don’t you get a hotel room,’ and I prop him back up and everything is still fine. Finally at 7:30 the cops come and one of them asks, ‘O.K., where’s the stiff?,’ and I says, ‘Over there on the couch,’ and he asks, ‘Well, did he pay you?,’ and I says ‘No,’ and the cop shakes his head and says, ‘The things people will do to get out of paying. But this is a new one,’ and I says to him, ‘Well, there’s a first time for everything.’ ”


The New York Yacht Club
Photograph By: Jonathan Becker

(From the online slideshow on Vanity Fair's June 2012 article Positively 44th Street)

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Posted By: Kidist P. Asrat

Tuesday, January 6, 2015

New York Ceilings



Here is another image I neglected to download from my trip last summer (in June) to New York.

It is the edge of the dome in the stained glass ceiling of the Plaza Hotel.



[Photos By: KPA]

I selected some of the photographs I took during the trip, and posted them at my New York Reflections photography blog under Meet Me at the Plaza.

Here is an article describing the art of renovating stained glass, and there is a brief description of the Plaza's dome, which was renovated in 2006.
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Posted By: Kidist P. Asrat
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Monday, January 5, 2015

Brownstones

For some reason, I neglected to post these photographs of brownstones I took in the Upper West Side last summer.

Often, as I keep noticing with New York, surprising details are apparent, if we look a little closer.





[Photos By: KPA]

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Posted By: Kidist P. Asrat
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Saturday, January 3, 2015

"The plane above the city was almost an omen"


TWA Poster
David Klein
Museum of Modern Art, New York
1956
Medium:Photolithograph
Dimensions:40 x 25"
Gift of TWA


Tiberge from Galliawatch wrote me this in an email after I sent her some of my posts at Reclaiming Beauty:
"[The poster is ] full of American energy and optimism. But the plane above the city was almost an omen."
She was commenting on this post, where I was writing about the poster for the TWA airlines from 1956, which I've also posted above.

Yes, with the horrible history that we have inherited, now planes in the sky, in a darkish background, become ominous (there is also that glittering star-like spark on the skyscraper, as though a premonition and target for those towers. But a single, twinkling star like that used to tell us that Baby Jesus was nearby).

Omens are important to pay attention to. But we cannot live under the cloud of omens, nor let ominous events take over our lives. We have to live, after all.

It is interesting that I was drawn to this illustration, although I was talking about a nostalgic time, labeling my article "When America Was Great." I noticed the bright, exuberant, kaleidoscopic colors, and a kind of New Year's revelry that goes on in Times Square. Tiberge, wiser, paid attention to the plane.

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Posted By: Kidist P. Asrat
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Saturday, December 27, 2014

Christ the King: Reclaiming Beauty


Cristo Rei Portuguese Catholic Church, in Mississauga
[Photo By: KPA]


This is what I saw, for a brief ten or fifteen minutes, outside my window this morning. I had just enough time to see it, decide to take a picture of it, and grab my camera. I even had to change some settings. And when ready to take the photograph, the SD (Secure Digital) card was not in place, so I had to grab it out of my laptop, and place it right-side into the camera! I would say this all took about 8-9 minutes. And the strip of light was still there, actually better than before. I took the shot in about 1 1/2 minutes. And about three minutes later, the strip of light had widened considerably, no longer clearly delineated. And a half hour later, the sky had become overcast.

I should add that this is how one reclaims beauty: To recognize its fleeting nature if left to the elements and our devices, and to find a way to make it permanent, either through art, or through daily searches (getting up early to see a sunrise, for example), and making it a part of our lives.
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Posted By: Kidist P. Asrat
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Saturday, November 15, 2014

Falling Glass and Decaying Cities


The Mies van der Rohe building in downtown Toronto
(in the Toronto Dominion Square)

The Christmas tree has tiny lights, lit up even during the day


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I went to the Toronto Dominion Centre yesterday to sit by the skyscrapers and to have a warm cup of soup, when I noticed broken glass. As I approached closer, there were police guarding the square and a yellow ribbon closing off a large area surrounding the square.

"What happened?"

"We have broken glass" said the reticent policeman.

I stood around, and realized that something had fallen from one of the buildings. Listening in to some conversation, it became clear that it was a piece of glass from a window.

I had my camera strapped around my neck, so I took some photographs. I then sat a distant away, still in view of the buildings, and warmed up with my soup.

I persisted, and asked another policeman what had happened.

"Are you with the media?"

"No, I take photographs of the city, I can show you if you want. I'm here to take a picture of the Christmas tree."

(In fact, I have taken many photographs of the area, and posted them here, here, here, here and here. As far as glass skyscrapers go, I think it is one of the successful ones.)

"A piece of glass fell off one of the buildings."

"Wow! Is everything OK."

"Yes, it was the internal glass. We're OK, but we'll close off the area for a while."

"Thanks!"

Imagine the sturdy, beautiful, still-standing architecture of the pre-modern era which I recently posted about here, here, and here falling apart like this. Despite their lack of maintenance and care, these buildings are STILL standing. And with all the attention the TD Center gets (it is in the rich, fiancial district of the city) it is falling apart!. Imagine these glass skyscrapers lasting this long. In fact, I was downtown Toronto today, and the area around Mies van der Rohe skyscraper was closed off because a glass window had fallen down on the pavement!!!!

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Judith from Galliawatch recently wrote to me, after I posted my Cleveland, Pittsburgh and Erie photographs:
I hope you are well, and despite the bus error have fond memories of your trip. The cities you visited unfortunately are no longer what they once were. Will they come back to life, stimulated by intelligence and caring? Or will they continue to decay? Until we are rid of the destructive elements of our population the answer is not positive.
I replied to Judith:
Laura at The Thinking Housewife also commented on the decline of these cities on her blog. I guess it is not news, I remember reading about Detroit for many years, about its horrible degeneration.

But, I also think we should show off these cities, and their sturdy and beautiful architecture (can you imagine the terrible glass sky-scrapers lasting this long?).

Can I use your comments for a post I will write on this (not-so-new) phenomenon, and what I think the cure is?

By the way, some degenerate was standing many feet away from me, watching me, while I was at the one of these sites in Cleveland.

I stood there and "out-stared" him, and waited for him to leave. He did, eventually. But, it was still dangerous, which I didn't realize was an issue there (like downtown Phillie - amidst those lovely buildings!)
Here is what Laura from The Thinking Housewife posted on her site, including my photo of Cleveland, and a comment from Jewel, a reader:
Your link to Reclaiming Beauty’s article on Cleveland made me think of the trend in photographing dying cities, namely Detroit and Philadelphia, and the beautiful ruins left behind after years of fiscal mismanagement. Even in ruins, so much of what was once beautiful stands as a silent condemnation of the present culture that espouses ugliness.

Here’s a hastily made tourism video inviting you to visit Cleveland.
Here is the awful promotional video, suitable for a degenerating city:



Still, my thoughts hold. These cities have beautiful buildings, and they can still be salvaged, unlike the glass skyscrapers for which I don't see a long future at all. With a little imagination, some dedication, and a lot of perseverance, I think we can reclaim these architectural heritages.

The really sad part, though, is that the Board of Education building in Cleveland (I posted on it here) is being transformed into "luxury condominiums." I understand that urban designers are trying to get money into their decaying cities, but turning heritage buildings (the Board of Educaion building was constructed in 1931, after the Classical, Beaux-Arts style, as the Board of Education) into homes for the rich is not the route. Why not allow this building to resume its former function?

Of course, this requires much more than renting out to the rich. It means building some kind of community which will invest in the area besides setting up a gated residence with bullet-proof cars and alarms to ward off dangers. It means people living together and building together. I suppose the idea is that if the money comes then other amenities will also arrive: shops, restaurants. Schools. Too quick a fix, I say, which looks at the problem in a narrow, isolated way.

Plus, downtown should be for the people, for everyone. This blogger agrees with this. And if one feels that one cannot go downtown because it becomes, however subtly, out-of-bounds, then it still remains the ghost town that it is now.


Former Cleveland Board of Education building, with a statue of Lincoln
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Posted By: Kidist P. Asrat
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Thursday, September 18, 2014

Yale's False Supporters


Hirsi Ali in Yale on September 15, 2014
She is surrounded by wood panels of The Sheffield-Sterling-Strachona Auditorium
in Yale, a testament to architect Clark Zantzinger, who fashioned
this after traditional wainscot paneling.



The Sheffield-Sterling-Strachona Auditorium in Yale,
where Hirsi Ali gave her recent lecture



View of the auditorium from the stage
More information on the hall at Yale's website
[scroll down the linked page]


Here is some background on the Sheffield-Sterling-Strathcona Hall:
Until 1860 the Medical Institutions was situated in a hotel built by James Hillhouse, at the corner of what are now Prospect and Groves Streets. This building, which Yale purchased for $12,500, later became Sheffield Hall and remained part of the Yale scene until it was removed in 1931 to make way for the Sheffield-Sterling-Strathchona Hall. The location of the new school in this spot marked the beginning of the spread of the college to the north.

Yale: A History
Brooks Mather Kelley:
P. 132
Google books
The architect for the current building is Clark Zantzinger of Zantzinger, Borie & Medary, Architects, who also built:
- 1917: Washington Memorial Chapel, Valley Forge National Historical Park, Valley Forge, Pennsylvania.
- 1926-27: Fidelity Mutual Life Insurance Company Building, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Now part of the Philadelphia Museum of Art.
- 1927-28: Detroit Institute of Arts, Detroit, Michigan
- 1932-35: Department of Justice Building, Washington, D.C.
With her forceful, but ambiguous message of "freedom of choice," Hirsi Ali stands in the elegant halls of Western academia, but she is not a trustworthy champion of the West.

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Here are some recent posts I did on Hirsi Ali:
- Creed vs. Conscience
- Hirsi Ali is no Spokeswoman for the West
- Ferguson in America: And His Wry Belief in the Fall of American Power
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Posted By: Kidist P. Asrat
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