In the Kingdom of Death (War Chronicle/Diaries) – Part 24 Poems for Children from Kyrgyzstan Nothing knew your body – Poetry from Venezuela The Silent Shift: Watching Our Parents Grow Old Sharjah Ruler allocates AED 4.5 million to enrich Sharjah's libraries An Indonesian Tribe’s Language Gets Korean Alphabet Peace rules in the world… – Poetry from Bosnia Herzegovina US versus China: Is global power struggle reshaping the world?
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Abdulnasser.. A Man of Peace in the Heart of Battle

No one disagreed on the presence of this trait in Gamal Abdel Nasser's personality; his supporters described it as a love for peace, while his opponents characterized it as weakness and defeatism. Both confirm his preference not to resort to war as a primary line of defense. Our introduction to him began with the Revolution of July 23,

Mansoura: An Egyptian City with a History of Heroism

In the early thirteenth century, the forces of the Fifth Crusade came to Egypt and occupied the coastal city of Damietta. Its terrified residents fled in all directions. Egypt's Sultan, King Al-Kamil Nasir al-Din Mohammed, rushed with his forces to resist this aggression, which, if it passed through the routes of the Delta and reached

Children of People" Novel - Reem Basyouni

Could it be possible for a historical novel of this immense magnitude to discuss some groups of humans, the events and situations they lived through in the Mamluk era, and their upbringing during this time, all through the symbols and phrases we use every day and every time? It seems as if the narrator weaves for us a dictionary in a simple,

"Challenge"

The cemetery caretaker opened the door. The smell of death almost drove them back to the café again, for the dead have their dignity, and it was nighttime. Yet, Khalf's stubbornness and his insistence to continue the jesting turned it serious and their gathering: utterly harmonious and enjoyable, just like every day in the

The Arab Nobel... Naguib Mahfouz

As my goal in this glimpse is to address Arab youth, who are beginning to place their feet in the land of knowledge and draw their strength from their great civilization, my aim is also to address non-Arab foreign audiences so they can learn something new about our Arab literature through translating the articles into their English and