UAE–Korea Partnership to Study the Establishment of a Korean Industrial Zone in the UAE Dubai Police Warn Against Putting 'Slime' in the Microwave Fifty-Six Years Ago… An Episode from My Memories of the June 1967 Battles The American University in Cairo Launches the “Career Path Accelerator” The International Emmy Awards.. Fifteen Years of Trust Mohamed Monier Appointed to International Emmy Awards Judging Panels Mohamed Monier Completes Writing of “Prisoner in Thailand” Ahead of Production and Casting Phase AI "Black Box" for Autonomous Vehicles Paves the Way for the Future of Smart Mobility
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Amma

How Arabic Translations of Ancient Greek Texts Started a New Scientific Revolution

In the eighth-century CE the Abbasids undertook to collect the wisdom of the world in their new capital at Baghdad In the eighth-century CE the Abbasids undertook to collect the wisdom of the world in their new capital at Baghdad. This project started with the second Abbasid caliph, al-Mansur (“the Conqueror,” r. 754–74),

The Satanic images of Al-Khidr: a novel of rituals

Rituals are the password and key to the wonderful novel (The Devil of Al-Khidr) by the writer Muhammad Ibrahim Taha, those rituals that start from the first scene and never go away through the pages of the novel, which relies on a rural popular memory. But before entering the novelistic text, we must question the title, as Al-Khidr in the

The Chishti Sabiri Saints of Kalyam Sharif

Kalyam Sharif is an important village in Rawalpindi’s Gujar Khan Tehsil of Pakistan’s Punjab province Kalyam Sharif is an important village in Rawalpindi‘s Gujar Khan Tehsil, situated about 3 km off the Grand Trunk Road, near Mandra. The village is famous for the shrine complex of Khwaja Fazaluddin Chishti Sabiri Kalyami,

How Mohamed Okasha Raised His Creative Clouds

The poet, critic and artist Mohamed Okasha faces our creative life with more than one mask. We can describe these masks accurately when we read his poetic and prose texts, follow his critical analyses, or stand before his sculptural works. How to Raise a Cloud, Book Cover If we praise words by describing them as painted with

Bitter Orange by the Lebanese writer Basma ElKhatib

We follow the swing that the narrator took in “Bitter Orange” by the Lebanese writer Basma ElKhatib (Dar Al-Adab) as a deceptive, rotating place from which she appears to tell, between a backward jolt that overlooks a past in which the most painful thing is, and the most beautiful thing in it is almost absent, and a forward jolt