My Venice – Poetry from Italy Victory for HM Alchahine in UAE President’s Cup in Germany UAE's Rashid Al Dhaheri shines with P2 Finish on Hungaroring Debut Blog: Observe More, Judge Less Observations of an Expat: Scary Thoughts The best books on Endangered Languages The Illness – Poetry from China Poem: My Homesick Heart
Business Middle East - Mebusiness

Business

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

Introduction to Great Poetry Movement

Great Poetry Movement, also Great Poeticism, is a poetic trend in the Chinese poetry world in the 21st century. Great poetry can be traced back to epic poetry. It was proposed by Chinese poet Hai Zi in the 1980s, and in 2007, poet Cao Shui wrote the "Manifesto of Great Poeticism" and jointly launched the Great Poetry Movement with

5 books on Partition highlight hope amidst conflict and the human cost of Independence

These five works of fiction by women authors are set against the backdrop of the Independence and Partition of India, and inspire us with their strong, resilient characters who survive turbulent times. By Chanda Bisht The month of August always brings up mixed memories for those in the Subcontinent. While India celebrates its 78th

Kazan International Film Festival (Altyn Minbar), Twenty Years of Dreams

Cinema is the mirror of our dreams, illuminating the giant silver screen, from which light flows into the hearts and minds of viewers. In the city of Kazan, twenty years ago, the symbol of the (Altyn Minbar) added a human dimension to this light, which was the Kazan International Film Festival, which I have been monitoring since its