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Salwa Muhamasani Mumina

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Salwa Muhamasani Mumina
Born1908
Beirut
1957 (48-49 Y )1957 (48-49 Y )
🏳️ NationalityLebanon
💼 Occupation
Women's rights activist, short story writer, essayist and university professor

Salwa Mahmassani Maumann (Arabic: سلوى محمصاني مومنة‎) (1908 - 1957) was a Lebanese women's rights activist and storyteller. She was born in Beirut . She studied elementary school at the Islamic Girls Charity Association School. I learned Arabic literature on Julia Tama, Salma Al - Sayyagh, and Arabic on Mustafa Al - Galayini. She continued her studies at Mar Yusuf School and learned French. She then taught Arabic for 13 years. Her literary articles were published in Arabic newspapers such as the Egyptian "New Woman." She was Vice-President of the Lebanon Women's University. She is one of the first leaders of the Lebanese women's movement. Her "With Life" (1956) is a story collection of 15 short stories dealing with social and family themes.[1][2][3]

Biography[edit]

In 1908/1326, Salwa Mahmassani was born in Beirut, the capital of the Ottoman state of Beirut, and grew up in a well-known Muslim family that loved science.[4] Salwa Mahmassani learned at the Islamic Girls' College of Purposes and the French Mar Yusuf Girls' College, taught high school classes and obtained a diploma. The Arabic literature was studied by Julia Tama and Salma Al-Sayyg and the Arabic language by Mustafa Al-Galayini in 1928-1929.[1]

She practiced teaching, taught Arabic at Fatima Al-Zahra School, then was appointed principal and then at the Islamic College for Girls for 13 years.[1]

She died in 1957.[1]

Job[edit]

One story collection, "With Life," was published and left a number of critical and social articles published in newspapers and magazines, defending the rights of Arab and Beninese women.

Rights[edit]

Participated in legal activities for Lebanese women in several associations, notably the University of Lebanese Women, where she served as Secretary and Vice-President, and was on the governing body of the University of Women's Organizations. Participated in several conferences of the representative of Lebanese women, including the Congress of the Women's Union of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland in 1949, where she represented Lebanon and gave a lecture entitled "Women in Politics and Meeting." I have been assigned to represent Lebanon more than once at the meetings of the Middle East Education and Social Studies Seminar, including: Delegate of the University of Women's Organizations to the General Conference of the Arab Women's Union held in Aley in 1950, as well as in Beirut in 1954.[1] In Issa Fatuh's view, "Salwa Muhammazani's goal was to reform society, starting with the individual. If the individual takes care to control his or her behaviour, restrict his or her conduct, and direct it to the fullest, the best and the best, we shall approach the desired society."

Literature[edit]

She took care of writing at an early age. It was first written and published in "The New Woman" magazine for Julia Demagogue. She took an interest in children in adult literature, especially in her story "The Boy" from her book "With Life," a collection of social, educational and human stories in which she expressed her views and her vision of life through short story and was predominantly narrative. It also has a manuscript story collection entitled "Cross Paths." Emily Faris Ibrahim said of her, "The dominant character of her style is that of input.

Special thoughts in the mold of a story, the extraction of a lesson, and always coming up after analysis, to a conclusion where readers feel a great deal of sympathy for young or intended victims and a willingness to forgive evil or aspiring people, regardless of the story's conditions in terms of style, node or context of incidents. "[1]

Her articles were published in the Egyptian newspaper Politics Weekly under the pseudonym, followed by the Lebanese magazine "The Voice of Women."

Personal life[edit]

In 1941, She married Mohamed Aziz Momena (1896 -?).The owner of the Aziziyah school in Beirut , in which he had an assistant.And they didn't have the kids.[5]

References[edit]

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 إملي فارس إبراهيم (1961). أديبات لبنانيات (الطبعة الأولى). بيروت، لبنان: دار الريحاني للطباعة والنشر. صفحة 202-213.
  2. ميشال جحا (2008). القصة القصيرة في لبنان: سير ونصوص(الطبعة الأولى). بيروت، لبنان: الجامعة اللبنانية الأمريكية. صفحة 115.
  3. يشال جحا (2008). القصة القصيرة في لبنان: سير ونصوص (الطبعة الأولى). بيروت ، لبنان : الجامعة اللبنانية الأمريكية . صفحة ١١٥.
  4. العلاَّمة القانوني الدكتور صُبْحي المَحْمَصانِي (1909-1986) | ثقافة | جريدة اللواء Archived 2021-06-28 at the Wayback Machine
  5. مؤرشف من الأصل في 22 يونيو 2021. اطلع عليه بتاريخ 22 يونيو 2021.https://web.archive.org/web/20210622195205/https://www.yabeyrouth.com/3752-آل-مومنة-مومني



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