Friday, September 12, 2014

As Caliphates Compete, Radical Islam Will Eventually Weaken Read more:As Caliphates Compete, Radical Islam Will Eventually Weaken

Summary

The rise of the Islamic State will inspire other jihadist groups to claim their own caliphates and emirates. In the long run, the extremism of these contrived dominions and the competition among them will undermine the jihadist movement. However, before that happens, the world will witness much upheaval.

Analysis

In a 52-minute video that surfaced in late August, Abubakar Shekau, the head of Nigerian jihadist group Boko Haram, spoke of an Islamic State in northeastern Nigeria. The statement came two months after Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the chief of the transnational jihadist movement in Syria and Iraq, declared the re-establishment of the caliphate, renaming the group the Islamic State. Though likely inspired by the Islamic State, Boko Haram is not simply mimicking its more powerful Syrian-Iraqi counterpart; it is taking its cue from the Nigeria-based Sokoto Caliphate, which was established in the early 1800s and existed for almost a century until Britain gained control of the region. 

The Caliphate's Role in History

According to classical Muslim political theorists, there can be only one caliphate for the entire Muslim global community, or ummah. In practice, though, there have been rival claimants to authority and even competing caliphates throughout the history of Islam. In our July 1 analysis on the subject, Stratfor explained not only how multiple emirates and sultanates emerged independently of the caliphate but also that there were rival caliphates -- for example, the Abbasid in Baghdad (749-1258), Umayyad in the Iberian Peninsula (929-1031) and Fatimid in Cairo (909-1171).
These medieval-era caliphates were not just the byproduct of geographical constraints facing the original caliphate but also heavily shaped by political and religious rivalries and political evolution. These dynastic empires were the building blocks of the Muslim world, not unlike the wider international system of the time. For this reason, they endured for centuries until Europe's geopolitical push into the Muslim world in the 18th century.
In the past two centuries, the medieval caliphates, emirates and sultanates have been replaced by nation-states. Though artificially created and weak, these modern Muslim polities are unlikely to be swept away by radical Islamists seeking to re-establish caliphates and emirates. Although nationalism was initially a European import into the Arab/Muslim world and continues to face competition from religious and tribal identities, it is well established in the public psyche.
This can be seen in the organization of most Islamists along national lines. Most Islamists, who are aligned with the Muslim Brotherhood or some variant of it, embrace the nation-state and should not be conflated with the minority of radical Islamists and jihadists who seek to eliminate national boundaries and return to a romanticized notion of the past. Still, caliphates and emirates have emerged because of the failures of the modern Muslim nation-states to create democratic systems and, more broadly, to provide a viable political economy for their citizens -- a failure that radical Islamist forces have deftly exploited.

Deficiencies in Modern Caliphates

Radical Islamists are able to capture the imagination of the economically disadvantaged youth who understand neither politics nor Islam. The most successful jihadist entity in terms of capturing territory, the Islamic State, rose in part because of rare circumstances related to the regional geopolitical struggle between the Shiite and Sunni camps in the Middle East. However, as is evident from the international alignment of forces against the Islamic State, the transnational jihadist movement faces severe challenges moving forward.
In addition, its ultra-extremist policies and behavior are further alienating the Islamic State from the Muslim world. Al Qaeda's denunciation of the Islamic State as a deviant force underscores the competition it faces from within the jihadist movement. Furthermore, there is an entire constellation of radical Islamists beyond al Qaeda that does not accept the Islamic State's claim to a caliphate. These Islamists will seek to form their own caliphates or emirates in the same battle spaces. Meanwhile, other groups operating in different parts of the Muslim world seek to form their own caliphates.
An important concept in this context is that of the leader of the faithful, or emir al-momineen, which was the title given to the second caliph of Islam, Omar bin al-Khattab (579-644). Since then, this title has become synonymous with that of the caliph. In the contemporary age, Afghan Taliban founder Mullah Mohammad Omar assumed the title in the 1990s, when the movement ruled most of Afghanistan. Decades earlier, Morocco's constitution conferred this title upon the country's monarch.
Morocco's king only claims leadership of the country's Muslim majority. Likewise, the Afghan Taliban's status as a nationalist jihadist force meant that Mullah Omar only claimed leadership of the Muslims of Afghanistan. Al-Baghdadi's move to declare himself caliph of all the Muslims of the world therefore challenges the authority of the emirates and dynastical or republican regimes in the Islamic world.

The Fate of Jihadists and Caliphates

In the distant future, radical Islamism will likely lose its appeal because of two broad factors. First, the attempt to create caliphates and the associated difficulties of governance will force many radical Islamists to opt for pragmatism and become relatively moderate. Second, opposition from fellow Muslims also learning about politics and governance will give them less room to operate.
Yet, while this modern phenomenon of competing caliphates, emirates or Islamic states will only further weaken jihadist groups, the idea of the caliphate remains an unresolved matter. Muslims have long accepted that the notion does not connote a single state for the ummah; instead it symbolizes pan-Muslim cooperation in the form of a supra-national regime such as the European Union. This remains a desirable goal, as is evident from the Organization of Islamic Conference which, though anemic, remains intact.
Still, these developments will be the outcome of a multigenerational struggle. Until then, the social, political and economic problems of the Arab/Muslim world, along with sectarian strife, geopolitical rivalries and the interests of outside powers (especially the United States and the West), will sustain the conditions in which violent extremists thrive. Thus, radical Islamism will remain a threat globally -- and especially for Muslims themselves -- for decades.

"As Caliphates Compete, Radical Islam Will Eventually Weaken is republished with permission of Stratfor."

Read more: As Caliphates Compete, Radical Islam Will Eventually Weaken | Stratfor
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Pentagon Details Plans for 475 Additional Troops in Iraq

By Army Sgt. 1st Class Tyrone C. Marshall Jr.
DoD News, Defense Media Activity
WASHINGTON, Sept. 11, 2014 - The Defense Department provided details today for the additional service members President Barack Obama announced will deploy to Iraq as part of the strategy against the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant.
Pentagon Press Secretary Navy Rear Adm. John Kirby discussed when troops will begin to arrive and their intended mission.
"I think you're going to start to see these additional 475 arrive in the coming days," he said. "Probably over the next week or so, you'll ... see them start to arrive."
Transition to advise-and-assist mission
Kirby said the six assessment teams now in Iraq will transition to an advise-and-assist mission.
"They will be reinforced by additional troops as the president announced, and I provided some details on last night," he said.
"We're talking about somewhere between 15 and 20 advise-and-assist teams total when they're all there and manned up."
"The level at which they will be providing advice and assistance is at the brigade or higher headquarters level," the admiral said.
The United States will continue to man and support the joint operations centers in Irbil and Baghdad, Kirby said, and there will continue to be an advise-and-assist role for those manning those joint operations centers.
The admiral emphasized that the advise-and-assist teams are not intended to have a combat role, such as foot patrols or any similar types of missions.
"And of course -- we've said this before -- they'll always have the right of self-defense," he added.
Intensified efforts
"I think the president was clear that we're going to intensify our efforts inside Iraq," Kirby said. "There's no question about that, and you know we're going to be as transparent with you as we can about what we're hitting and why we're hitting it. The direction we got from the commander in chief was very clear. We're going to be more aggressive in supporting the Iraqi security forces on the ground."
Working with new Iraqi government
Kirby noted the United States is "eager" to work with the new Iraqi government, which he called "a new unity government."
"All of the signs are pointing to a much more inclusive political process that's responsive to all Iraqis, to include a more responsible management of the Iraqi security forces," he said. "The vectors are pointing in the right way."
The admiral said that because that government has just stood up, much work remains to be done. "The difference is now we have a new government -- a government that has publically proclaimed a desire to be much more inclusive and responsible. Things are pointing in the right direction," he added.
Train-and-equip mission
The admiral also discussed training and equipping properly vetted elements of the moderate Syrian armed opposition.
"The train-and-equip money ... we obviously still want that $500 million," Kirby said. "[As] you know, we put that in the fiscal year [2015] overseas contingencies operation budget."
Officials are working with members of Congress to try to get the funds approved and appropriated, Kirby said.
"Obviously, we need that money to be able to move forward on this particular train-and-equip program," Kirby said, noting that it's a priority for Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel.

Thursday, September 11, 2014

NASA’s Mars Curiosity Rover Arrives at Martian Mountain

NASA's Mars Curiosity rover has reached the Red Planet's Mount Sharp, a Mount-Rainier-size mountain at the center of the vast Gale Crater and the rover mission's long-term prime destination.

"Curiosity now will begin a new chapter from an already outstanding introduction to the world," said Jim Green, director of NASA's Planetary Science Division at NASA Headquarters in Washington. "After a historic and innovative landing along with its successful science discoveries, the scientific sequel is upon us."

Curiosity’s trek up the mountain will begin with an examination of the mountain's lower slopes. The rover is starting this process at an entry point near an outcrop called Pahrump Hills, rather than continuing on to the previously-planned, further entry point known as Murray Buttes. Both entry points lay along a boundary where the southern base layer of the mountain meets crater-floor deposits washed down from the crater’s northern rim.

Old and new routes of NASA's Mars Curiosity rover
This image shows the old and new routes of NASA's Mars Curiosity rover and is composed of color strips taken by the High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment, or HiRISE, on NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter. This new route provides excellent access to many features in the Murray Formation. And it will eventually pass by the Murray Formation's namesake, Murray Buttes, previously considered to be the entry point to Mt. Sharp.
Image Credit: 
NASA/JPL-Caltech/Univ. of Arizona

"It has been a long but historic journey to this Martian mountain,” said Curiosity Project Scientist John Grotzinger of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena. “The nature of the terrain at Pahrump Hills and just beyond it is a better place than Murray Buttes to learn about the significance of this contact. The exposures at the contact are better due to greater topographic relief."

The decision to head uphill sooner, instead of continuing to Murray Buttes, also draws from improved understanding of the region’s geography provided by the rover’s examinations of several outcrops during the past year. Curiosity currently is positioned at the base of the mountain along a pale, distinctive geological feature called the Murray Formation. Compared to neighboring crater-floor terrain, the rock of the Murray Formation is softer and does not preserve impact scars, as well. As viewed from orbit, it is not as well-layered as other units at the base of Mount Sharp.

Curiosity made its first close-up study last month of two Murray Formation outcrops, both revealing notable differences from the terrain explored by Curiosity during the past year. The first outcrop, called Bonanza King, proved too unstable for drilling, but was examined by the rover’s instruments and determined to have high silicon content. A second outcrop, examined with the rover's telephoto Mast Camera, revealed a fine-grained, platy surface laced with sulfate-filled veins.

While some of these terrain differences are not apparent in observations made by NASA's Mars orbiters, the rover team still relies heavily on images taken by the agency’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO) to plan Curiosity’s travel routes and locations for study.

For example, MRO images helped the rover team locate mesas that are over 60 feet (18 meters) tall in an area of terrain shortly beyond Pahrump Hills, which reveal an exposure of the Murray Formation uphill and toward the south. The team plans to use Curiosity's drill to acquire a sample from this site for analysis by instruments inside the rover. The site lies at the southern end of a valley Curiosity will enter this week from the north.

Though this valley has a sandy floor the length of two football fields, the team expects it will be an easier trek than the sandy-floored Hidden Valley, where last month Curiosity's wheels slipped too much for safe crossing.

Curiosity reached its current location after its route was modified earlier this year in response to excessive wheel wear. In late 2013, the team realized a region of Martian terrain littered with sharp, embedded rocks was poking holes in four of the rover’s six wheels. This damage accelerated the rate of wear and tear beyond that for which the rover team had planned. In response, the team altered the rover’s route to a milder terrain, bringing the rover farther south, toward the base of Mount Sharp.

"The wheels issue contributed to taking the rover farther south sooner than planned, but it is not a factor in the science-driven decision to start ascending here rather than continuing to Murray Buttes first," said Jennifer Trosper, Curiosity Deputy Project Manager at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, California. "We have been driving hard for many months to reach the entry point to Mount Sharp," Trosper said. "Now that we've made it, we'll be adjusting the operations style from a priority on driving to a priority on conducting the investigations needed at each layer of the mountain."

After landing inside Gale Crater in August 2012, Curiosity fulfilled in its first year of operations its major science goal of determining whether Mars ever offered environmental conditions favorable for microbial life. Clay-bearing sedimentary rocks on the crater floor, in an area called Yellowknife Bay, yielded evidence of a lakebed environment billions of years ago that offered fresh water, all of the key elemental ingredients for life, and a chemical source of energy for microbes.

NASA's Mars Science Laboratory Project continues to use Curiosity to assess ancient habitable environments and major changes in Martian environmental conditions. The destinations on Mount Sharp offer a series of geological layers that recorded different chapters in the environmental evolution of Mars.

The Mars Exploration Rover Project is one element of NASA's ongoing preparation for a human mission to the Red Planet in the 2030s. JPL built Curiosity and manages the project and MRO for NASA's Science Mission Directorate in Washington.

For more information about Curiosity, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov/msl

and

http://mars.jpl.nasa.gov/msl/

Information about MRO activities is available online at:

http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/MRO

Follow the Curiosity rover mission on social media at:

http://www.facebook.com/marscuriosity

and

http://www.twitter.com/marscuriosity

-end-

Career Burnout: The Root Cause is Loss of Purpose


Physician and mindful living expert Romila “Dr. Romie” Mushtaq, MD has a unique perspective to discuss career burnout; not only is she a neurologist specializing in mind-body medicine, but she also used the mindfulness-based techniques she teaches to heal herself from career burnout as a physician.

Career burnout is characterized clinically by loss of passion, physical and emotional exhaustion, cynicism and detachment, and feelings of ineffectiveness and lack of accomplishment.

“Career burnout can lead to stress-related illnesses such as insomnia, anxiety, and ulcers. The Center for Disease Control estimates that 80 percent of doctor’s office visits are due to stress-related illnesses,” Dr. Romie notes.

In her recent TEDx talk in Fargo, N.D., “The Powerful Secret of Your Breath,” Dr. Romie discusses the root cause of career burnout.

“Career burnout arises when our external world is not in alignment with our internal soul compass.  The way we find our life purpose is being aligned with our internal soul compass; this is the place within us where all the answers reside – some call it your intuition, your gut instinct, or your internal wisdom.”

Mindfulness, being fully present in the current moment, is as simple as one thing: breathing, Dr. Romie says.

“Being stuck in the past can lead to depression and a feeling of hopelessness.  And when we lose hope we cannot heal. When we are worried about the future, we fuel anxiety. Only in the present moment are we truly connected to our dreams and life purpose.”

Dr. Romie combines her expertise and professional experiences in neurology, mind-body medicine and meditation to help individual and corporate clients contend with their stress-infused lives. She teaches how to take mindfulness from the meditation mat into a mindful way of living – and breathing – to prevent or to heal from career burnout. She illuminates the medicine behind the mindfulness and how to connect to life purpose in her TEDx talk: “The Powerful Secret of Your Breath” (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=slKAFdJ8ZHY). 

About Dr. Romie Mushtaq

Dr. Romie completed her medical training and education at the Medical University of South Carolina, The University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, and The University of Michigan.  She previously served as an assistant professor at the Medical College of Wisconsin. A personal health and wellness life coach, Dr. Romie heals clients from around the country at the Center for Natural and Integrative Medicine in Orlando, Florida and travels extensively to speak about the scientific and medical evidence behind mindful living. You can learn more about Dr. Romie on her website:www.brainbodybeauty.com.

TD15W (Northwestern Pacific Ocean)

AIRS image of TD15W
NASA's Aqua satellite passed over Tropical Depression 15W on September 11 at 03:53 UTC and saw banding of thunderstorms with cold cloud tops (purple).
Image Credit: 
NASA/JPL, Ed Olsen
NASA Sees a Consolidating Tropical Depression 15W

Tropical Depression 15W is moving through the Northwestern Pacific Ocean and infrared satellite data from NASA took a closer look at the thunderstorms that make up the tropical cyclone. The depression appears to be consolidating and getting better organized.

NASA's Aqua satellite passed over Tropical Depression 15W on September 11 at 03:53 UTC (Sept. 10 at 11:53 p.m. EDT) and the Atmospheric Infrared Sounder (AIRS) instrument aboard captured infrared data on the storm. The infrared data showed very cold temperatures in some of the cloud tops of thunderstorms that make up the tropical cyclone. The infrared data also showed a slowly-consolidating center of circulation.

The Joint Typhoon Warning Center that forecasts tropical cyclones in the Northwestern Pacific Ocean also looked at microwave data from the European EUMETSAT METOP satellite. That microwave data showed that there were fragmented bands of thunderstorms in the northern and southern quadrants of the storm, wrapping into the center.

At 0900 UTC (5 a.m. EDT) on September 11, 2014, Tropical Depression 15W (TD15W) had maximum sustained winds near 30 knots (34.5 mph/55.5 kph). It was located near 13.1 north latitude and 137.8 east longitude, about 193 nautical miles (222 miles/357 km) north of Yap./ TD15W has tracked northwestward at 20 knots (23 mph/37 kph) and is expected to continue in that general direction over the next couple of days.

TD15W is expected to strengthen into a tropical storm and later to typhoon strength as it approaches Luzon, the northern Philippines, on October 14. Current forecasts from the Joint Typhoon Warning Center take the storm over the far northern tip of Luzon and into the South China Sea by September 15 as a typhoon.


LANL News: New exhibit highlights the archaeology, wildlife and climate of Los Alamos

Opens Sept. 17 at Laboratory’s Bradbury Science Museum

LOS ALAMOS, N.M., Sept. 11, 2014—The Bradbury Science Museum unveils a new interactive exhibit at 4 p.m., Sept. 17 featuring the rich history and current research into archaeology, wildlife biology, local climate and sustainability efforts at Los Alamos National Laboratory.

“Our role is to support the mission of the Laboratory while being good stewards of the environment,” said Jen Payne, a team leader in the Laboratory’s Environmental Stewardship Services Group and exhibit curator. “The National Historic Preservation Act requires us to share our knowledge of cultural resources with the public. This new exhibit helps us to do public outreach and provide virtual access to some of the unique archaeological sites situated on Laboratory property.”

The exhibit is titled “Environmental Research and Monitoring.” Opening remarks start at 5 p.m., and a talk on the Laboratory’s annual Environmental Report is scheduled for 6 p.m. During the evening, two of the Bradbury’s Scientist Ambassadors will be “Scientists in the Spotlight,” with engaging face-to-face materials prompting conversations about fresh water and sea ice. Attendees also can play the “Thirst for Power” game that explores the nexus of energy, water and climate.

The exhibit shows in posters, interactive elements and videos the Laboratory’s compliance work and research into the diverse archaeological and biological resources found here, as well as local climate research and the Laboratory’s environmental sustainability activities. It also shows how current Laboratory research into tree mortality is giving clues to how global climate change will affect our local area, and lets visitors learn about energy savings activities in Lab facilities.

Laboratory property has a rich diversity of archaeology and wildlife. Nearly 2,000 historic properties spanning 5,500 years of human history have been identified on Laboratory land. Three threatened and endangered species plus a wide diversity of birds, bats, owls, large animals, and other mammals call this land home.

In archaeology, the exhibit traces this area’s extensive human history and focuses on Laboratory excavations and research in the past 50 years. The wildlife section of the new exhibit showcase the Laboratory’s research, compliance and protection efforts of three threatened and endangered species living here, as well as large animal and migratory bird studies.

Interactive

The exhibit’s interactive elements include two new iPad apps. “Owls and Bats of Los Alamos,” allows museum visitors to identify various species of bats and owls living in local habitats, listen to owl calls, and test their knowledge in a quiz.

“Los Alamos Archaeology: 5,000 Years of History,” allows visitors to explore and learn about extensive archaeological sites and artifacts identified on Laboratory grounds, dating from 5,500 years ago up to the Manhattan Project.

Also featured is a 3-D movie, “Nake’muu: Village on the Edge,” which allows visitors to experience a virtual tour of Nake’muu Pueblo, an 800-year-old archaeological site that has standing masonry walls.

“This standing wall Pueblo is not accessible to the public because of its restricted location,” said Payne. “The virtual tour allows museum visitors to experience site first-hand. It allows visitors and long-time residents of the area to experience this unique archaeological site situated on DOE property.”

Refreshments will be served, and the museum will be giving out free tree seedlings to plant and free water bottles during the opening.


 A standing wall at the Nake'muu Pueblo archaeological site on Los Alamos National Laboratory property.

A Cavate site with petroglyphs on Laboratory property.

Los Alamos Achieves 20-Year Low on Radioactive Air Emissions


Annual dose rate from the Laboratory far below EPA limit

LOS ALAMOS, N.M., September 10, 2014—Los Alamos National Laboratory achieved its lowest radioactive air emissions rate in 20 years in 2013, according to annual air quality results released recently.

Each year, the Laboratory measures air emissions through a comprehensive system of 40 air monitoring stations located at the Laboratory and in neighboring communities that provide data about ambient air quality. The Laboratory monitors 80 minor sources and 29 major sources at the Laboratory, such as exhaust stacks from radiological and nuclear facilities.

In 2013, the Los Alamos offsite dose rate was 0.21 millirem, about 2 percent of the Environmental Protection Agency's Clean Air Act limit of 10 millirem. This 20-year low is attributed to focused, more efficient operations and the cleanup of legacy environmental sites.

“The Laboratory has worked diligently to ensure the air is as clean as possible,” said Hai Shen of the Department of Energy's Los Alamos Field Office. “It's clear from these results that the air continues to be safe to breathe.”

A dose is the amount of radiation energy absorbed by the body. Dose rates are calculated in millirems, a unit of radioactive dose measurement. The National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurement estimates the average radiation dose per person in the U.S. is 620 millirems each year, with about half coming from natural background sources and the other half from medical diagnostic procedures and treatments.

“The goal of our air monitoring program is to ensure and demonstrate that the Laboratory is protecting human and environmental health,” said Michael Brandt, associate director of Environment, Safety and Health at the Laboratory. “We have a highly qualified, professional staff whose daily actions keep the offsite dose as low as reasonably achievable. It exemplifies the Laboratory's commitment to environment, safety and health.”

TD6 (Atlantic Ocean)

Tropical Depression 6
This visible image of Tropical Depression 6 was taken by NOAA's GOES-East satellite at 7:45 a.m. EDT on September 11 as it developed. Credit:
Image Credit: 
NASA/NOAA GOES Project
Satellite View of Newborn Atlantic Tropical Depression 6

The sixth tropical depression of the Atlantic Ocean Hurricane Season formed in the Eastern Atlantic Ocean and NOAA's GOES-East satellite captured it.

A visible image of Tropical Depression 6 was taken by NOAA's GOES-East satellite at 7:45 a.m. EDT on September 11 as it developed. The image was created by NASA/NOAA's GOES Project at the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland.

In addition to using GOES imagery and data from other NOAA and NASA satellites, The National Hurricane Center also uses measurements from the Advanced Scatterometer or ASCAT instrument that flies aboard the EUMETSAT METOP satellite. Forecaster Beven at the National Hurricane Center noted "Satellite imagery and a recent ASCAT-B overpass indicate that the low pressure area over the eastern Atlantic has a well-defined circulation and organized convective banding near the center."

At 11 a.m. EDT Tropical Depression Six had maximum sustained winds near 35 mph (55 kph) and the depression could become a tropical storm later in the day. The center of Tropical Depression Six was located near latitude 16.2 north and longitude 37.1 west, about 870 miles (1,400 km) west of the Cape Verde Islands. The depression is moving toward the northwest near 13 mph (20 kph) and is expected to move northwest or west-northwest is expected during the next couple of days. The estimated minimum central pressure is 1007 millibars.

Despite being in an area of wind shear, the NHC noted that computer model guidance forecasts slow but steady strengthening.


The Birth of the Star Spangled Banner (Edison, 1914)

This week we’re celebrating the bicentennial ofThe Star Spangled Banner, which originated as a poem written by Francis Scott Key after he witnessed the unsuccessful bombardment of Ft. McHenry by the British Navy on 14 September 1814.

Edison Kinetogram description for The Birth of the Star Spangled Banner

Although The Star Spangled Banner wasn’t adopted officially as our National Anthem until 1931, its repeated use in flag-raising and other government ceremonies accorded it an exalted status before that. The song’s 100thanniversary in 1914 was cause for commemoration, including a two reel dramatization from the Edison Film Company called The Birth of the Star Spangled Banner. The copy we present here comes from George Kleine Collection.

Edison published a twice-monthly magazine for distributors and exhibitors called the EdisonKinetogram (several volumes are available via the Hathi Trust), which provides a wealth of information about the company’s films. The entry of The Birth of the Star Spangled Banner is typical: complete credits–including for screenwriter J. W. Blake and director George A. Lessey–a plot synopsis (incidentally, a typed copy of this synopsis accompanied the copyright registration for the film), suggestions for promotion (the fact Edison offered a “six sheet” poster–a sizable 81″ x 81″–for the film indicates they considered it an important offering), and even some music cues for theater accompanists.

The score for our online presentation of The Birth of the Star Spangled Banner is provided by Andrew Simpson. Andrew is a Professor in the Benjamin T. Rome School of Music at The Catholic University of America. When he’s not composing operas and orchestral works, he regularly accompanies silent films in the Packard Campus Theater and many other venues here and abroad. If there was ever a film that demanded the playing of a well-known song it was this one, so I was curious how Andrew would score it:

As a composer and film accompanist, most of the scores I create consist of entirely original material–but sometimes a film calls upon the accompanist to play a specific piece of music. Guess which tune I’m asked to play in this film?  But more on that in a moment…

Mine is an improvised piano score which uses several themes and textures, and while the mood of my score changes continually to match the film’s action, I also want to unify the music in some way. So, to serve as a unifying musical motif, I have chosen a three-note passage from the tune of The Star Spangled Bannerthose notes which set the words, “by the dawn’s [early light].” This three-note idea is easily recognizable and allows the listener to follow the thread of the music, even if unconsciously, while following the film’s story.

The film’s final scene shows the first singing of The Star Spangled Banner; the actor playing Francis Scott Key leads a group of men in song. At such a moment, the musician can play but one tune.

Playing The Star Spangled Banneron the piano is one thing: playing it in synchronization with a group of singing actors on screen is quite another. This is not as simple as it seems; a brief description of my process will give insight into just how challenging silent film accompaniment can be.

In that final scene, Key is asked to lead the singing of his song. He gives a couple of beats in a brisk tempo, and then the men begin to sing. The musician’s first challenge is to match the tempo of what the singers are singing. The actors don’t really start together, as a close view will reveal; still, one can move forward confidently. However, a problem then arises.

A few moments after we see the men singing, an intertitle comes up which gives the lyrics for the first part ofThe Star Spangled Banner. Now, the musician can no longer watch the singers and try to follow their mouths to keep time with them: he/she can only hope that the intertitle is long enough–and short enough–to allow the musician to play the tune at a steady tempo, because there is no certain way to know when the title will end. It’s a little bit like shooting an arrow at a covered target, the bullseye of which is revealed only after you have made your shot. When the title does go away, we return to the men singing. However, it’s unclear exactly where the singers are at this moment in the tune. Not all of them seem even to be singing the same song, and they certainly don’t appear to be singing together! Even some close lip-reading is not helpful here. My strategy, then, is to continue to play The Star Spangled Banner in as steady a tempo as possible. A few seconds later, a second intertitle comes up with the second half of the lyrics. The same musical process continues during this title. The return to the scene shows the men clearly singing “Land of the free/and the home of the brave,” then raise their hats and cheer. At this point, it all comes together as the music ends with the singers.”

The Birth of the Star Spangled Banner (Edison, 1914)

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Obama Exalts America's Endurance in Wake of 9/11 Attacks

By Amaani Lyle

DoD News, Defense Media Activity

WASHINGTON, Sept. 11, 2014 - Thirteen years after the deadliest terrorist attack on American soil, President Barack Obama spoke at an observance at the Pentagon 9/11 Memorial today to honor those who lost their lives and those who have persevered.

As combat missions in Afghanistan draw to a close in three months, Obama noted that America endures in the tenacity of its survivors and the memories of more than 6,800 American patriots who perished on and since Sept. 11, 2001.

"America endures in the strength of your families, who, through your anguish, kept living," Obama said. "You've kept alive a love that no act of terror could ever extinguish."

The president recounted that terrorists sought to do more than destroy buildings and murder thousands of innocent men, women and children on that fateful day. "They sought to break our spirit and to prove to the world that their power to destroy was greater than our power to persevere and to build," he said.

But America and its citizens proved them wrong, he added, as evidenced in the post-9/11 generation of those who serve in the military and as first responders.

"Because of these men and women, Americans now work in a gleaming Freedom Tower," Obama said. "We visit our great cities. We fill our stadiums and cheer for our teams. We carry on, because, as Americans, we do not give in to fear -- ever."

The president also lauded America and the "perennial optimism" that defines its people, who he said will shape the days to come.

"Beginning tomorrow there will be teenagers, young adults, who were born after 9/11," the president said. "While these young Americans did not know the horror of that day, their lives have been shaped by all the days since."

The president acknowledged difficult years since the attacks, but he praised the triumph of hope over fear as the nation continues to evolve.

"Generations from now, Americans will still build towers that reach toward the heavens, still serve in embassies that stand for freedom around the world, still wear the uniform and give meaning to those words written two centuries ago: land of the free, home of the brave," he said.

Obama Exalts America's Endurance in Wake of 9/11 Attacks

By Amaani Lyle

DoD News, Defense Media Activity

WASHINGTON, Sept. 11, 2014 - Thirteen years after the deadliest terrorist attack on American soil, President Barack Obama spoke at an observance at the Pentagon 9/11 Memorial today to honor those who lost their lives and those who have persevered.

As combat missions in Afghanistan draw to a close in three months, Obama noted that America endures in the tenacity of its survivors and the memories of more than 6,800 American patriots who perished on and since Sept. 11, 2001.

"America endures in the strength of your families, who, through your anguish, kept living," Obama said. "You've kept alive a love that no act of terror could ever extinguish."

The president recounted that terrorists sought to do more than destroy buildings and murder thousands of innocent men, women and children on that fateful day. "They sought to break our spirit and to prove to the world that their power to destroy was greater than our power to persevere and to build," he said.

But America and its citizens proved them wrong, he added, as evidenced in the post-9/11 generation of those who serve in the military and as first responders.

"Because of these men and women, Americans now work in a gleaming Freedom Tower," Obama said. "We visit our great cities. We fill our stadiums and cheer for our teams. We carry on, because, as Americans, we do not give in to fear -- ever."

The president also lauded America and the "perennial optimism" that defines its people, who he said will shape the days to come.

"Beginning tomorrow there will be teenagers, young adults, who were born after 9/11," the president said. "While these young Americans did not know the horror of that day, their lives have been shaped by all the days since."

The president acknowledged difficult years since the attacks, but he praised the triumph of hope over fear as the nation continues to evolve.

"Generations from now, Americans will still build towers that reach toward the heavens, still serve in embassies that stand for freedom around the world, still wear the uniform and give meaning to those words written two centuries ago: land of the free, home of the brave," he said.

Opening Immigrants’ Eyes to Environmental Health in American Homes By Kate Gibson

ECOSS Staff member Sophorn Sim at an Indoor Air event

ECOSS Staff member Sophorn Sim at an Indoor Air event







When Sophorn Sim first moved to the United States from Cambodia, she finally received medical treatment for her chronic lung problems, a legacy of an early childhood illness and years spent in a forced labor camp run by the Khmer Rouge. Despite treatment, Sophorn’s condition got worse: she started coughing up blood and had to use her emergency inhaler up to three times a week. Like many new immigrants and refugees, Sophorn faced new health hazards in the United States for which she was ill-prepared and that exacerbated her condition. Her first apartment was covered with mold, to which her family responded by cleaning the entire apartment with bleach and without proper precautions. Not accustomed to the American notion of different soaps for different uses, she used laundry detergent for bathing and washing her hair, exposing herself to bleach and irritating her scarred lungs.

Fahmo Abdulle goes over healthy home tips with members of the Somali community

Fahmo Abdulle goes over healthy home tips with members of the Somali community

Sophorn’s story, sadly, is not unique. Many refugee immigrant families are exposed to additional health hazards due to language and cultural barriers, lack of education, and misinformation spread through communities while living in areas with higher concentrations of poverty and less healthy conditions. For example, many immigrant families have settled in communities in close proximity to the Seattle-Tacoma International Airport, the I-5 freeway, Superfund sites such as the Lower Duwamish River, mixed industrial/residential zones, and other potential sources of toxic exposure. Some new immigrants and refugees come from different climates and don’t know about proper ventilation practices for their new homes. Others have misconceptions about items that people who grew up in the United States take for granted, such as using Murphy’s Oil cleaner to wash dishes or to cook eggs, or confusing such items as Pine Sol with apple juice and Comet with parmesan cheese.

English Language Learner (ELL) students at Foster High School learn about indoor air quality

English Language Learner (ELL) students at Foster High School learn about indoor air quality

Thanks to an EPA Environmental Justice Small Grant, the Environmental Coalition of South Seattle (ECOSS) significantly expanded its Healthy Homes program this year to reach more immigrants in a broader region. The program is aimed at increasing awareness of indoor air quality among the Seattle area’s new immigrant and refugee populations—particularly Burmese, Bhutanese, and Somalian. Through the program, ECOSS is reaching out to low-income, refugee, and new immigrant communities with free training, information, and green cleaning kits to improve indoor air quality and prevent harmful health effects associated with indoor air pollution. In partnership with the American Lung Association, ECOSS trained community members, who then planned outreach for their communities. In addition, they conducted home assessments, helping families in their homes with practical, low cost solutions.

For many participants, the information was eye opening. Often, new immigrants think of the United States as a healthy place with the best indoor air quality, and often assume that unsafe products would not be available in stores. For many new immigrants it can thus come as a surprise that education about product safety is even necessary. Allan Kafley, who led outreach to the Bhutanese community, noted that many in that community had spent years in refugee camps where pollutants were much more obvious: dust in the air, particulates from at-home wool spinning, and the charcoal briquettes used for cooking. In sharp contrast, indoor air hazards in the United States—chemicals used in paint and cleaners, for example—are relatively invisible.

The ECOSS team distributes green cleaning kits

The ECOSS team distributes green cleaning kits

The Healthy Homes program has been a tremendous success so far, reaching over 500 individuals in the first year through presentations and in-home assessments. To Allan, the in-home assessments are particularly effective, allowing outreach coordinators to be much more specific and concrete than through group presentations. He can point directly to the car cleaning chemicals that a father stores in his kitchen and tell him about the danger it poses to his family, and see immediate results. ECOSS looks forward to reaching more new immigrants and refugees through this important ongoing program, as well as through word of mouth.

About the Author: Kate Gibson is the Communications/Fund Development Associate for the Environmental Coalition of South Seattle.