Piece image

From Boston to Bethlehem: Organic T-Shirts For Peace

From: Rebecca Sheir
Length: 05:20

Embed_button
Bringing peace and prosperity to the Middle East - one t-shirt at a time. Read the full description.

Arja-line_small Given the wrenching and longstanding Palestinian-Israeli conflict, if you were told that an organic t-shirt could bring an end to it all, you'd probably deem the idea impossibly "meshugah." 

But a Boston-area businessman thinks differently. No Sweat Apparel founder Adam Nieman has teamed up with a Palestinian textile factory, in a collaboration they call "Made in Bethlehem." Rebecca Sheir brings us the story of an unexpected international collaboration that hopes to bring about peace in the Middle East... one t-shirt at a time.

More from Rebecca Sheir

Caption: Dragonfly wearing a "telemetry backpack"

Backpacks... for Dragonflies? (03:43)
From: Rebecca Sheir

Why itsy-bitsy-teeny-weeny backpacks may be the key to understanding how animals capture prey.
Caption: Cliff Brody looks at an old photo of his deceased friend/sergeant, Joe Blakely, who changed Cliff’s life during the Vietnam War., Credit: Rebecca Sheir

Veteran Repays Near-Half-Century Debt (05:40)
From: Rebecca Sheir

How do you thank someone who saves you from tragedy? This Vietnam veteran knows.
Piece image

"Marathon Man" of Jazz Celebrates a Lifetime of Making Music (07:00)
From: Rebecca Sheir

Andrew White may very well be the most famous jazz legend... you've never heard of.
Caption: The boundary stones are the oldest federal monuments in D.C. (and Virginia)., Credit: Stephen Powers

Racing to Save D.C.'s Oldest Federal Monuments (04:10)
From: Rebecca Sheir

Washington's oldest monuments have nearly been forgotten. But a group of engineers, preservationists and history buffs is racing to change that.
Caption: The Packard Campus is roughly 500,000 square feet, built into the side of a mountain in Virginia’s Blue Ridge Mountains., Credit: Library of Congress/Matt Raymond

Library Of Congress Preserves A Treasure Trove... Underground (short version) (03:28)
From: Rebecca Sheir

What do you get when you take a former Cold War bunker and fill it with the world’s largest collection of films, TV shows, radio broadcasts and sound recordings?
Caption: The Packard Campus is roughly 500,000 square feet, built into the side of a mountain in Virginia’s Blue Ridge Mountains., Credit: Library of Congress Photo/ Matt Raymond

Library Of Congress Preserves A Treasure Trove... Underground (06:38)
From: Rebecca Sheir

What do you get when you take a former Cold War bunker and fill it with the world’s largest collection of films, TV shows, radio broadcasts and sound recordings?
Caption: The original Virginia Is For Lovers slogan/logo, created by Martin & Woltz (now The Martin Agency) in 1968., Credit: The Martin Agency

Is Virginia Really For Lovers? (05:50)
From: Rebecca Sheir

The real story behind one of the most famous tourism slogans of all time.
Caption: This rough sketch for a children's book drew one D.C. native into a mystery regarding “Colored Only” signs in D.C. in the 1930s. , Credit: Rebecca Sheir

Remembering the Subtle Signs of Segregation (07:41)
From: Rebecca Sheir

A well-meaning illustration in a children's book sparks controversy over segregation in the nation's capital in the 1930s.
Caption: Scientists working on the Webb Telescope say it's so revolutionary, it’s like “our generation’s Apollo.”

An Extra-Chilly Successor To Hubble (06:22)
From: Rebecca Sheir

Come winter, your neck of the woods may be cold. But guess how frigid the James Webb Space Telescope will be when it launches in 2018? 400 degrees Fahrenheit below zero. For real.
Caption: At age 29, Martin Spitznagel is the World Champion of Old-Time Piano Playing., Credit: Martin Spitznagel

From Scott Joplin to Super Mario Bros.: Making Old-Time Piano New Again (03:48)
From: Rebecca Sheir

A 20-something pianist is making old-time piano new again... with a little help from Darth Vader and Super Mario Bros.

Piece Description

Given the wrenching and longstanding Palestinian-Israeli conflict, if you were told that an organic t-shirt could bring an end to it all, you'd probably deem the idea impossibly "meshugah." 

But a Boston-area businessman thinks differently. No Sweat Apparel founder Adam Nieman has teamed up with a Palestinian textile factory, in a collaboration they call "Made in Bethlehem." Rebecca Sheir brings us the story of an unexpected international collaboration that hopes to bring about peace in the Middle East... one t-shirt at a time.

Broadcast History

This piece originally aired on New Hampshire Public Radio's "Word of Mouth," September 2, 2008.

Related Website

http://www.nhpr.org/node/17303