The International Emmy Awards.. Fifteen Years of Trust Mohamed Monier Appointed to International Emmy Awards Judging Panels 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
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poetry

Morning Musings - Words

Words have a power that's fearless, and a magic that's unbeatable. They are a precise scale that can kill or bring to life, a remedy and a disease, rain and arrows. Words are eternal; they never die. They have a majesty that can plummet you into the deepest trenches or elevate you to the highest heavens. Words have the astonishment

The Novel Responds to Readers' Tastes

Whoever has the chance to visit libraries and places of books and magazines sellers in squares and main streets now will see a dazzling novel invasion, and perhaps will not find a single poetry collection or a single short story collection amidst this abundance of novel publications. During a field trip, I asked one of the book sellers at

1st WPM World Congress Held in Medellín and Caracas

The World Poetry Movement is a coordination of international poetry festivals, poetry projects and poets from more than 170 countries that, through the globalization and realization of poetic actions, seeks to contribute to the construction of a new humanism for the twenty-first century, permanently promoting intercultural dialogue through

Venezuelan President receives representatives of World Poetry Movement (WPM)

nezuelan President Nicolás Maduro received the icons of the World Poetry Movement (WPM), headed by the General Coordinator of the Movement, the Colombian poet Fernando Réndon. Pedro Ruiz, Hanan Awwad, President Nicolás Maduro, Fernando Rendon, Francis Combes, Nimrod Bena , and Rati Saxena (starting from left)

Shawki Traces Hugo's Steps

Despite the English occupation of Egypt lasting about seventy-five years (three-quarters of a century), French culture was the most influential in the aristocratic class in Egypt. Most of its members went to France to obtain their higher degrees from there. For example, we saw literary figures and visual artists like Taha Hussein, Mohamed