Me, Field Marshal El-Gamasy, and Translation When We Reach Our Eighties The Joy I Lived How Iran thinks: Sadat’s early reading of a revolutionary state Article by Eng. Ahmed Bahgat – IT Expert & AI Projects Consultant Nashwa Al Ruwaini Among the 100 Most Impactful Voices The UAE : A Nation That Masters the Art of Crossing Crises Second edition of Abu Dhabi Poetry Festival launches Monday with diverse cultural programme
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Abyss – Poetry from Germany

When I speak of the abyss I speak of my heart and soul; Of darkness in its endlessness. Jerry Langdon, renowned poet and artist, based in Germany, shares his poetry From South-Western, Michigan, Jerry Langdon lives in Germany since the early 90’s. He is an Artist and Poet. His works bathe in a darker side of emotion and

The Visual Language of the Greek Artist Ioannis Kaiserlis

Ioannis Kaiserlis deeply believes in the birth of ideas from the ruins, from the gloomy, from where apparently there is no light, movement, life. The ecological consciousness of the artist Ioannis Kaiserlis is occupied by various extensions, with the primary one being the religious one. Kaiserlis, on the one hand, is sad and mourns for the

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),

The Air is Scented – Poetry from Bangladesh

Under the morning breeze Silver dew burns The fragrance falls in the air. Manik Chakraborty, a renowned rhymer from Bangladesh, shares his poetry Poet Manik Chakraborty, a man of simple nature, is a well-developed and intellectual consciousness in the unique creations of Bengali Rhymes Literature. The free movement of rhymes

The Satanic images of Al-Khidr: a novel of rituals

Rituals are the password and key to the wonderful novel (The Devil of Al-Khidr) by the writer Muhammad Ibrahim Taha, those rituals that start from the first scene and never go away through the pages of the novel, which relies on a rural popular memory. But before entering the novelistic text, we must question the title, as Al-Khidr in the