One Who Paints Mountains and Rivers Sindhi girl’s path: glory to service AI poised to advance Arabic language on global stage: ALC Chairman UAE Team Emirates-XRG's Sivakov impresses with second at Grand Prix Cycliste de Québec Three Korean hospitals rank among world’s top 10 cancer centres Cholera kills more people for second consecutive year: WHO Bull Engravings in Sindh’s Khashani Valley Merely Living and Living with Purpose
Business Middle East - Mebusiness

Story

I am Palestine

Hands were tainted and corruption prevailed in the apple box I staked on. Rot spread and expanded after worms infested it. Our era lost its purity and now it flaunts its victories and imposes its dominance. It shed my blood and displaced my children. I lost my initial innocence in front of their eyes. They distanced from me gradually until my

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

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

A Reading of the Novel "Wad Jeddah" by Novelist Mostafa El-Balki

Do you know "Fahim the tailor"? Of course not. Nobody around him knows this name even though it's his official name on documents. But when you mention "Wad Jeddah", distances and explanatory phrases become succinct. This title, which once was a mark of mockery and bullying, became unique to him. The cover

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