Refugee camps are pearly dark graves of dreams and we’re the dream diggers
June 20 is the World Refugee Day, and Charles Lipanda Mahigwe, a young poet and writer, born in DR Congo, raised orphan and spent life in a refugee camp, shares a poem showing Solidarity with Refugees
Charles Lipanda Matenga, was born and raised
Despite the scarcity of meetings with the great Yemeni poet, critic and professor Abdulaziz Al-Maqalih, the most beautiful Sana’an mornings was when he hosted us in a poetry symposium in which I was among its readers, with the creative poetess Mai Muzaffar, and in the presence of the novelist friend Ali Al-Muqri.
At that time, our
The book is titled “Homeless.” The reason for that is not that its character doesn’t have a home; it means that she doesn’t have herself. Due to her fears, anxieties, and insecurities, every minute she suffered severe loneliness.
Over the past decade, literature on LGBT issues has begun to flourish. Earlier, in
The invention of Artificial Intelligence has significantly impacted our culture and relationships, eliminating essential factors like trust, feelings, and emotions from relationships
The story of Artificial Intelligence began with a simple question ‘Can machine think?’
In 1950, Alan Turing, a British mathematician and
That alley embraces even the song that seems to have been abandoned. The streets of Insa-dong shared with each other
Cho Sung-Min, a poet from Korea, the Land of Morning Calm, shares his poem
Mr. Cho Sung-Min, Doctor of Law, is a Korean poet. Born in Hanam, Gyeonggi-do, Cho debuted in the literary magazine Munyesajo in 2005 and is