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 The Literary Traveler: A Book Celebrating Ashraf Aboul-Yazid Through the Eyes of the World World-Renowned Composer Omar Khairat to Perform an Exceptional Concert Tomorrow in London My Assignment in the Socialist People’s Libyan Arab Jamahiriya Arab Media Platforms Spotlight Egyptian Students’ Sustainable Food Innovation When the Narrative Collapses… Memories of Abdeen and Maadi
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In the Kingdom of Death (War Chronicle/Diaries) – Part 4

Fehmi Ajvazi, an eminent author from Kosovo, has shared his book ‘In the Kingdom of Death’ published in Albanian in 2012 in Pristina, and in Romanian in 2019, and was translated from Albanian to English. Sindh Courier is starting its episodes for the readers Fehmi Ajvazi author [In March 1999, the Serbian regime

Poem: Amidst the Skies, a Delicate Confession

A raindrop whispered to the cloud above: “You are my heart’s desire, my eternal love. I fall beneath your shadow, lost in gaze, Yearning to meet you, in ethereal ways.” Yasir Qazi, a writer and poet from Sindh, Pakistan shares his poem The poet is an acclaimed Sindhi literary figure, building upon a

Burning Candle – A Poem from Assam, India

She is a burning candle of profound and magnanimous love Leaving behind the disdain and contempt of windy night Shakil Ahmed, a renowned poet from Assam state of India, shares his poem Shakil Ahmed was born on 31st January 1969 at Badarpur, Assam, India. He completed his master’s degree in English Literature from Assam

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),

Mohamed Baraka in (The Lady's Tavern): Is it True that Love is Overwhelming?

I almost claim that the art of autobiography in Arabic literature has been greatly wronged by its writers, who have taken it out of the framework of history, documentation, and written confession, into the space of beautifying the writing selves, improving faded images, and even inventing fake histories that rely on ignorance of the