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The Waiting Gardens of North
A house with a date palm will never starve
The invisible enemy should not exist (Lamassu of Nineveh)
The invisible enemy should not exist (Northwest Palace of Nimrud)
The invisible enemy should not exist
May the obdurate foe not be in good health
The Ballad of Special Ops Cody
I'm good at love, I'm good at hate, it's in between I freeze
For us, the living
The flesh is yours, the bones are ours
Radio Silence
Imperfect Binding
Geniza for Ostia
Dar Al Sulh
What dust will rise?
Spoils
The Breakup
May the arrogant not prevail
The worst condition is to pass under a sword which is not one's own
White man got no dreaming
Enemy Kitchen
Endgames
The Visionaries
Dull Roar
Test Ballot: Examining the Faulty Machinery of Democracy
RETURN
(p)LOT: Proposition I
Romanticized all out of proportion
Minaret
Rise
Climate Control
paraSITE
DOWNLOADS
MICHAEL RAKOWITZ
INFORMATION
The Waiting Gardens of North
A house with a date palm will never starve
The invisible enemy should not exist (Lamassu of Nineveh)
The invisible enemy should not exist (Northwest Palace of Nimrud)
The invisible enemy should not exist
May the obdurate foe not be in good health
The Ballad of Special Ops Cody
I'm good at love, I'm good at hate, it's in between I freeze
For us, the living
The flesh is yours, the bones are ours
Radio Silence
Imperfect Binding
Geniza for Ostia
Dar Al Sulh
What dust will rise?
Spoils
The Breakup
May the arrogant not prevail
The worst condition is to pass under a sword which is not one's own
White man got no dreaming
Enemy Kitchen
Endgames
The Visionaries
Dull Roar
Test Ballot: Examining the Faulty Machinery of Democracy
RETURN
(p)LOT: Proposition I
Romanticized all out of proportion
Minaret
Rise
Climate Control
paraSITE
DOWNLOADS
MICHAEL RAKOWITZ
INFORMATION
Folder: PROJECTS
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The Waiting Gardens of North
A house with a date palm will never starve
The invisible enemy should not exist (Lamassu of Nineveh)
The invisible enemy should not exist (Northwest Palace of Nimrud)
The invisible enemy should not exist
May the obdurate foe not be in good health
The Ballad of Special Ops Cody
I'm good at love, I'm good at hate, it's in between I freeze
For us, the living
The flesh is yours, the bones are ours
Radio Silence
Imperfect Binding
Geniza for Ostia
Dar Al Sulh
What dust will rise?
Spoils
The Breakup
May the arrogant not prevail
The worst condition is to pass under a sword which is not one's own
White man got no dreaming
Enemy Kitchen
Endgames
The Visionaries
Dull Roar
Test Ballot: Examining the Faulty Machinery of Democracy
RETURN
(p)LOT: Proposition I
Romanticized all out of proportion
Minaret
Rise
Climate Control
paraSITE
DOWNLOADS
INFORMATION

 

0026_7c1-640x541.jpeg View fullsize
0028_f01-640x481.jpeg View fullsize
  Making baklawa. Other dishes made with these students include kubba bamia, a meat dumpling stew served with okra over basmati rice.    View fullsize

Making baklawa. Other dishes made with these students include kubba bamia, a meat dumpling stew served with okra over basmati rice.

  On one occasion, a student walked in and said, “Why are we making this nasty food? They (the Iraqis) blow up our soldiers every day and they knocked down the Twin Towers.” One student corrected her and said, “The Iraqis didn’t destroy the Twin Towe View fullsize

On one occasion, a student walked in and said, “Why are we making this nasty food? They (the Iraqis) blow up our soldiers every day and they knocked down the Twin Towers.” One student corrected her and said, “The Iraqis didn’t destroy the Twin Towers, bin Laden did.” Another said, “It wasn’t bin Laden, it was our government.” In this way, the project provided a space where the opinions, myths and facts that are perpetuated in a country during wartime could be communicated and discussed.

  After eight weeks of learning how to cook Iraqi food, the students at Hudson Guild Community Center proposed to teach me something about their own families’ recipes, since they now knew so much about mine. One student, Hyasheem, asked, “Do Iraqis m View fullsize

After eight weeks of learning how to cook Iraqi food, the students at Hudson Guild Community Center proposed to teach me something about their own families’ recipes, since they now knew so much about mine. One student, Hyasheem, asked, “Do Iraqis make Southern fried chicken?” I answered that no, to my knowledge there was nothing like it in Iraqi cuisine. “Well, then let’s invent it,” he said.

  Hyasheem (pictured) led the way and we cooked the chicken according to his specifications, using a shake-n-bake technique.       View fullsize

Hyasheem (pictured) led the way and we cooked the chicken according to his specifications, using a shake-n-bake technique.

  Cooking and eating a meal of amba salad, kubba, and debes wa’ rashi with students from Saratoga High School at Villa Montalvo at the Montalvo Arts Center in California. One student, named Connie Sheng, said “One day, it would be nice to know what i View fullsize

Cooking and eating a meal of amba salad, kubba, and debes wa’ rashi with students from Saratoga High School at Villa Montalvo at the Montalvo Arts Center in California. One student, named Connie Sheng, said “One day, it would be nice to know what it feels like to proud of my country.”

0008_6b1-580x409.jpeg View fullsize
    Enemy Kitchen barbecue at The National Vietnam Veterans Art Museum on Memorial Day, 2009. Together with members of the Chicago chapters of Iraq Veterans Against The War (IVAW) and Vietnam Veterans Against The War (VVAW), we cooked Iraqi kofta on View fullsize

Enemy Kitchen barbecue at The National Vietnam Veterans Art Museum on Memorial Day, 2009. Together with members of the Chicago chapters of Iraq Veterans Against The War (IVAW) and Vietnam Veterans Against The War (VVAW), we cooked Iraqi kofta on the grill instead of traditional hot dogs and hamburgers.

 

  Enemy Kitchen staff, comprised of Iraqi refugees and American veterans of the Iraq War, outside of Milo’s Pita Place, an Iraqi restaurant in Chicago's Rogers Park neighborhood that operates the truck. Most Iraqi restaurants in the city call themsel View fullsize

Enemy Kitchen staff, comprised of Iraqi refugees and American veterans of the Iraq War, outside of Milo’s Pita Place, an Iraqi restaurant in Chicago's Rogers Park neighborhood that operates the truck. Most Iraqi restaurants in the city call themselves Middle Eastern or Mediterranean to protect themselves from jingoistic attacks. Enemy Kitchen is the city's first Iraqi restaurant to publicly declare itself as such.

  Detail of paper plate replicas of Saddam Hussein's dishes on which food is served from the  Enemy Kitchen  food truck.    View fullsize

Detail of paper plate replicas of Saddam Hussein's dishes on which food is served from the Enemy Kitchen food truck.

  Enemy Kitchen is now a fully functional food truck on the streets of Chicago that features Iraqi refugee cooks and US veterans of the Iraq War serving as sous chefs. In this way, the power dynamic in Iraq is inverted, as Americans now take orders f View fullsize

Enemy Kitchen is now a fully functional food truck on the streets of Chicago that features Iraqi refugee cooks and US veterans of the Iraq War serving as sous chefs. In this way, the power dynamic in Iraq is inverted, as Americans now take orders from the Iraqis. The truck features the Chicago flag, rendered in Iraqi colors and serves food on paper replicas of the plates looted from Saddam Hussein's palaces in 2003. (add to new image - slide 93)

The truck has made visible and audible the people on both sides of the war, as dialogue accompanies the serving and consumption of food, and the truck creates a critical social space. 

0026_7c1-640x541.jpeg
0028_f01-640x481.jpeg
  Making baklawa. Other dishes made with these students include kubba bamia, a meat dumpling stew served with okra over basmati rice.
  On one occasion, a student walked in and said, “Why are we making this nasty food? They (the Iraqis) blow up our soldiers every day and they knocked down the Twin Towers.” One student corrected her and said, “The Iraqis didn’t destroy the Twin Towe
  After eight weeks of learning how to cook Iraqi food, the students at Hudson Guild Community Center proposed to teach me something about their own families’ recipes, since they now knew so much about mine. One student, Hyasheem, asked, “Do Iraqis m
  Hyasheem (pictured) led the way and we cooked the chicken according to his specifications, using a shake-n-bake technique.
  Cooking and eating a meal of amba salad, kubba, and debes wa’ rashi with students from Saratoga High School at Villa Montalvo at the Montalvo Arts Center in California. One student, named Connie Sheng, said “One day, it would be nice to know what i
0008_6b1-580x409.jpeg
    Enemy Kitchen barbecue at The National Vietnam Veterans Art Museum on Memorial Day, 2009. Together with members of the Chicago chapters of Iraq Veterans Against The War (IVAW) and Vietnam Veterans Against The War (VVAW), we cooked Iraqi kofta on
  Enemy Kitchen staff, comprised of Iraqi refugees and American veterans of the Iraq War, outside of Milo’s Pita Place, an Iraqi restaurant in Chicago's Rogers Park neighborhood that operates the truck. Most Iraqi restaurants in the city call themsel
  Detail of paper plate replicas of Saddam Hussein's dishes on which food is served from the  Enemy Kitchen  food truck.
  Enemy Kitchen is now a fully functional food truck on the streets of Chicago that features Iraqi refugee cooks and US veterans of the Iraq War serving as sous chefs. In this way, the power dynamic in Iraq is inverted, as Americans now take orders f