Healing Through the Heritage UAE plays key role in global golf development INDEX signs agreement with Egypt’s UPA to enhance strategic cooperation Adrien Saddier wins maiden title at Italian Open on his 200th DP World Tour start Egypt’s Youth.. Not a Distant Dream, but a Present Power Climate Change Impacts Everyday Life The Green Torch for all Cultures We Use People and Love Things
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REALITY

Land Trapped Between Hans-Georg Gadamer and Wolfgang Iser (Part One)

A Review of the Short Story Collection "Land Trapped" by the Libyan Writer Omar Al-Kikli. The binary of the writer and the text is no longer the sole concern of literary criticism. Instead, the receiver, or the reader, has been added as a crucial element, thus forming a new binary: the reader and the text. Reception

President El-Sisi and the Happiness of Egyptians

The exceptional measures announced by President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi for state employees, the business sector, and the public sector, which include raising the minimum income to 4,000 Egyptian pounds from 3,600 and increasing the tax exemption by 25% from 36,000 to 45,000, a 15% increase in "Takaful and Karama" pensions, and

Dreams and Achievements...

The celebration of Saudi National Day invokes connections and intricate relations between past, present, and a shared future. These connections span heritage, trade, construction, innovation, creativity, coordination, and shared visions, as well as cooperation and openness to the world at large. Love, prosperity, and optimism for the future

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We often come across souls we have never known, and faces we've never recognized before, falling in love with words without considering who wrote them or what inspired them to put them down, and what lies beneath them. We cry with eyes we've never seen, sharing moments with them, sending our kindest intentions, hoping our feelings

Face to Face.. Cinema is Still Possible!

Critic Mahmoud Abdel Shakoor says in his book "How to Watch a Movie", that dialogue in itself is a difficult art complementing the art of cinema, pointing out that Egyptian cinema in its golden age relied on giants specialized in dialogue, such as El Sayed Bedeir, Abul El-Saud El Ebiary, and Badee' Khairy, who were assigned to