Archive for April 2012

New mosque in Ciudad del Este: fears of future violence.



Image of the future mosque (and construction) in Ciudad del Este. h/t: Última Hora
A new mosque and cultural center is being built in Ciudad del Este (Paraguay). The cornerstone was laid this morning in a construction project that's estimated to take another year and a half. The building, which is located a little less than two miles west of Ciudad del Este's commercial center, is likely to prove controversial on a number of levels.

The area surrounding Ciudad del Este, the Triple Frontier where Argentina, Brazil, and Paraguay meet is home to a sizable Lebanese-Syrian population (some 3% of the total population in the region) which has come under international scrutiny. The security concerns are that the community in the Triple Frontier is connected to Islamic terrorist groups and provides financing/shelter/logistical support for violence in South America and beyond. The construction of a new mosque, financed entirely by the local community, might seem like a reaffirmation of this.

Última Hora, an important Paraguayan newspaper, reported on the cornerstone-laying ceremony that took place today and the user comments are fascinating. The majority (all written in Spanish, presumably by Paraguayans) are upset with the new mosque because they see it as an example of Muslim expansion into a Christian country: "Very bad. What lack of respect. They kill Catholics. Why let them build a mosque in a country that is 98% Catholic?" Another commentator worries that this will serve as a pretext for foreign military intervention: "This puts us in the sights of the gringos, so that they'll invade us in the future under the pretext of 'a hotbed of Arab terrorism' in order to get hold of our natural resource: water. Careful!" 

It'll be interesting to see how this conflict unfolds.

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Interesting Argentine Wine Fact: Immigration in 1900

Among other things, Argentina is known for immigration and wine. In the late 19th century and early 20th century, immigration from Europe was strongly encouraged (with subsidized housing and some job training for new arrivals to the port of Buenos Aires). The records of these waves of immigrants are contained in government archives, many of which have been uploaded to the web such as this excellent edition of the Memoria de la Dirección de Inmigración (the Annual Report of Immigration Services) for 1900.

Argentina is the world's fifth largest wine producer. Only France, Italy, Spain, and the U.S. top its numbers. And while this is impressive, what's even more impressive is that this industry was kick-started by European immigrants at the beginning of the last century and that these immigrants must have shown some gumption in thinking that they could make it in wine. In 1900, there were 23,289 agricultural laborers who immigrated to Argentina. That year, there were 4 oenologists. And this was a good year. Other years, there were even fewer. This means that many of the wineries established in the early decades of the 20th century were begun by farmers who knew how to coax life out of the soil, but who had to trial-and-error their way through barrels.

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