Afifa Saab
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Afifa Saab | |
---|---|
Born | 1900 Shuifat |
💀Died | 17 July 1989 [88-89 years old] Lebanon17 July 1989 [88-89 years old] |
💼 Occupation | |
Afifa Fendi Saab (1900 - 17 July 1989) was a Lebanese journalist and school pioneer of the Women's Renaissance in the East.[1][2] She was born in Shuifat, received her science at the English School in Beirut and then at the National School of Shuifat. It was published in July 1919 in Shuifat in Lebanon, a monthly women's magazine, scientific and literary, which lasted eight years until 1927. She and her sister co-founded the High School of Practice in 1925, and also wrote for magazines, "Politeness, Knowledge, Excerpt and the Voice of Women." She was known in Lebanon and the Arab world and is among the leaders of the Women's Renaissance in the East. She was a prominent member of a number of women's associations and organizations.[3]
Biography[edit]
Afifa bint Fendi ibn Qasim Saab was born in Shuifat in 1900 and studied at the English School in Beirut and graduated at the Brooker School, which then became the National School of Shuifat or the School of Chaplain Tanius Saad. She began her career working in journalism, texting many Arab and foreign newspapers, writing in many newspapers, including knowledge, politeness, excerpts, and the voice of women. She travelled to the United States to learn about educational curricula there. She then created Numb Magazine in 1919, which continued to publish eight years of service to women, literature, science and society. [1]
For several years in Lebanon and Iraq, in 1925 she set up a school in Alayah, in partnership with her sister Adeptin Fatina and Ziad, and spent her life in education. In the meantime, she did not hold the pen about writing articles in newspapers or magazines, nor did she give up on those who invited her to have an evening, give a lecture or give a talk. [1]
She was a prominent member of a number of women's associations and organizations. In 1958, the Lebanese state awarded her the Order of Rice of Sabbath in recognition of her jihad. She died in Alayeh on Monday, 17 July 1989.[1]
Writings[edit]
It has a monograph entitled The Druze Reality and the Imperative of Evolution with Other Literature, published in Beirutin 1962, and a memoir entitled The Oasis of Remembrance and dozens of articles.[4]
References[edit]
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 "معجم أعلام الدروز في لبنان - محمد خليل الباشا : matnawi : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive". web.archive.org. 2019-12-07. Retrieved 2021-05-09.
- ↑ "عفيفة صعب", ويكيبيديا (in العربية), 2021-04-25, retrieved 2021-05-09
- ↑ "عفيفة صعب". web.archive.org. 2019-12-10. Retrieved 2021-05-09.
- ↑ "العمامة - الكاتبات الدرزيات في لبنان". web.archive.org. 2019-12-10. Retrieved 2021-05-09.
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