Home >Our Partners >Artas Folklore Center
 
Login
email
password

users currently online: 10

arrow Home
arrow Your Personal Page
arrow People
arrow Places & Regions
arrow Family Trees
arrow History
arrow Culture
arrow Community Resources

arrow Photography - local
arrow Photography Diaspora
arrow Audio

arrow Our Partners
AEI-Open Windows
Artas Folklore Center
Turathuna

arrow About Us
arrow All Recent Entries
arrow Guest Book
arrow Message Board
arrow Newsletter
arrow Newsletter Archive

Artas Folklore Center
.

sorted by

Showing 1 - 12 from 12 entries

> THE FIFTEENTH ANNUAL ARTAS LETTUCE FESTIVAL
> Popular Songs and Dances of the Artas Folklore Troupe
> A Folklore Sampler
> Accomplishments 2007
> Annual Artas Lettuce Festival
> Aims and Activities
> Timeline 1972-2006
> Tourism and Recreation
> Attractions of Artas
> Recent articles on Artas
> Recommended Reading and Selected Bibliography on Artas
> Photo Series on Artas
  page 1 from 1  
ARTAS FOLKLORE CENTER



The Fifteenth Annual Artas Lettuce Festival

Established in 1993, Artas Folklore Center was the first cultural center in the Bethlehem area to be licensed by the Palestinian Authority under the Ministry of Culture. This gave formal recognition to twenty years of work by its founder, Musa Sanad. The founding board was composed of several illustrious figures such as Sameeha Khalil, founder of In’ash il Usra, Sharif Kanaana, Abdel Latif Baghrouti and Abdel Aziz Abu Hadba. However, as the years passed Artas Folklore Center became increasingly associated with its driving force, Musa Sanad.

Located in a historic building just near the village’s Mosque of Omar and the Artas Spring, it offers a spectacular view of the Artas Valley and the shrine of Hortus Conclusus, or the Enclosed Garden below. Its main objective is to preserve and promote the especially rich tangible and intangible heritage of the village, whose unique, lush ecosystem, traces of a large number of successive civilizations, and the diverse body of knowledge and lore culled over the last century-and-a-half by foreigners and Palestinians make it “the most studied village in Palestine,” as well as encouraging the study of Palestinian folklore and traditions in general.



Architectural preservation is an essential part of the work of the center, which is responsible for preserving several important buildings. Next on the list is the endangered Baldensperger house, where two foreign women lived and studied the village during the Mandate period. 

In the forefront of innovative tourism and recreation projects, the center is known for its festivals, especially its annual April Lettuce Festival, the typical rural village house/museum, its folklore troupe which has remained true to authentic forms, its innovative nature and heritage itineraries, its traditional Palestinian meals offered in a setting to match, and the individualized experience it offers its visitors, whether one or a hundred. 

A key institution in the village, the Artas Folklore Center not only works in preserving the village’s past, but has been instrumental in attending to the needs of the villagers, such as roads, garbage collection and schools. In addition, in advance of its much coveted community center, it is acting as a de facto community center with special programs for youth and women, for instance.



The Artas Folklore Center is run by an elected Board and has 96 members. The current President of the Board is Nidal Fahmy Ayesh. Previous funders have included the Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities, UNDP, United Arab Republic, British, Dutch, French, Belgian and Canadian Consulates or NGOs, the Finnish Institute for the Middle East, the Center for Cultural Heritage Preservation and Juzoor. Partners have included the Arab Educational Institute, the Palestine Wildlife Society, YMCA, Center for Women’s Affairs, and Sharek Youth Forum. In addition, the Artas Folklore Center has worked in close cooperation with a large number of institutions and individuals in both public and private sectors.

The Artas Advisory Board, in alphabetical order currently includes:
Carol Dabdoub, Director Public Relations, Bethlehem University
Emad Atrash, Director Palestine Wildlife Society
Fuad Giacaman, Director, Arab Educational Institute-Open Windows, Bethlehem
Hamed Qawasmeh, UNV specialist, OCHA; former Project Coordinator of Artas Folklore Center
Hoda Imam, Center for Jerusalem Studies
 Julia Dabdoub, President Bethlehem Arab Women's Union
Leyla Zuaiter, Unaffiliated
Sherif Kanaana, Director, Inash el Usra Studies Center
Toine Van Teefelen, Development Director, Arab Educational Institute-Open Windows, Bethlehem


Visit Artas
Artas offers much of interest to tourists, from simple country rambles, and authentic Palestinian cookery, which can also be ordered as take-away, to in-depth explorations of its rich and unique heritage. For more information or custom tours of Artas, contact the Artas Folklore Center 02 276 05 33 or Nidal Fahmy Ayesh 059 999 25 09. Email: artasfcenter@gmail.com