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Why Egyptians Don't Revolt? (book)

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Why Egyptian Don't Revolt?
Author
Illustrator
CountryEgypt
LanguageArabic
Published2017
Pages

The book Why Egyptians Don't Revolt? [1](Arabic: لماذا لا يثور المصريون ) by Alaa al-Aswani, a collection of essays recorded by the writer in his journals between 2004 and 2011. The book was released on 1 January 2017.

Comments from the book[edit]

In his book "Why Egyptians Do Not Erupt" in his fourth edition of the Egyptian Sunrise House, Alaa al-Aswani talks with us in his elegant language and smooth high style about the concerns of Egyptians under the late President Hosni Mubarak. Those who rebel against it are ready and justified. The sultan's agents are killed by elders and corrupt linings, benefiting from the exclusion of righteous elites who fear God's fear.

As for why Egyptians do not erupt, the writer replies: "What prevents Egyptians from protesting their righteous experience of oppression and their complete desperation for reform."

Is there no mercy for repression that does not weigh on human dignity!

In his book, the author tells us about the painful paradoxes of his people and many of these paradoxes he witnessed. Alaa al-Aswani compares the era of President Hosni Mubarak with the similar injustice and corruption and the reign of Jamal Abdel-Nasser with his true and sincere leadership, which has become a striking example to this day.

"Repression is, unfortunately, a common behaviour in Egypt. It is a heritage that we all have within us. We Egyptians have learned how to brush brute power just to prevent its evil. "

"How Egyptians have endured brutal repression over decades," Aswani asks. His latitude goes to the hearts of every ruler.

In a victory for occupied Palestine, President Mubarak asks: "What is the value of eating, drinking and sleeping, and we have lost our dignity and respect for ourselves?!"

Mr President, have you seen the bodies of Palestinian civilian martyrs torn apart by Israeli rockets. Who knew they would not attack Egypt after they had emptied Palestine?

Al-Aswani mocks the sloppy saying by many Arab rulers and politicians that the question of Palestine is the main reason why democracy has been delayed! "What does the question of Palestine have to do with tyranny".

In his book, Aswani criticizes some intellectuals in his homeland of Egypt who sees injustice and oppression and justifies him without vivacity and shame. He criticizes the attitude of some floral scholars who have ignored women's rights to the extent that Sheikh Azhari Attiyah Saqr is pushing the issues of poverty and legislated prisons of political activists Vivti that the handshake of women by men is against Islam! Who said that?

In return, this great disciplinarian praised Egypt's honourable intellectuals, such as the prestigious disciplinarian Ma 'Allah Ibrahim, who was offered the discretionary State Award and rejected it in the presence of a selection of senior fathers. With the audacity of "the great writer of God, Ibrahim blew his bomb and inflicted a painful blow on the regime in protest against the policy of a corrupt government that represses Egyptians with iron and fire."

The surprise was, as Al-Aswani puts it, "When the crowds penetrated a young man to say to God's making Abraham: You are bigger than all their awards, you express us."

It is meant to reflect the masses of the predominant poor.

Alaa al-Aswani was sincere when he compared the civilized treatment of the citizens of the West and America. He boldly criticized their rulers without being suppressed or sent to prison and prisons unlike in many Arab countries.

In his book, he pays tribute to Egypt's honourable judges, whose arms could not be twisted by the ruling regime and turned a blind eye to any fraud in the legislative elections.

In favour of Zaid, people are satisfied with the regime.

After, the book "Why the Egyptians Don't Revolt" by the Great Discipline Ala Al-Aswani, rightly documented the violations that demanded the poor of the Egyptians to such an extent as to denounce his forehead.

Here I say that what he has witnessed and documented applies to many Arab societies that consider "democracy" to be a threat to their governing elites.

Alaa Al-Aswani is truly a great moral figure whose owner is committed to transparency and boldness, enduring Arab corruption and blindness.

Alaa al-Aswani "Turned Egyptians' concerns into human ones"[edit]

In this context, it is necessary to overcome these "human concerns" of the Arab peoples. We read the full vocabulary of the Kuwaiti-born writer Khaldun Al-Naqib, which corresponds to the vision of the Aswani. and "the culture of liberation must breed in experience - human practice, But it is guided by a principle that has become evident through the historical human conflict that cannot be abandoned: freedom and equality are contiguous situations that lead to each other. "

In the end, I wonder: When will our Arab and Muslim societies recover from their political, economic and social ills and become "freedom" and "equality", in which two concomitant situations? When don't we grow up covered in sieves? When will our Arab and Muslim societies become true "democracy", with security and peace? When is the obsession of our rulers to provide justice to their people?[2]

Summary[edit]

In this book, Ala 'a Al-Aswani addresses a series of articles written individually during a period of a political and social movement from 2004-to 2011 that eventually led to a historic revolution, which we will continue to cry "a revolution that we did not preserve", but which is compiled by a link or a fictitious line of corruption and neglect. So I have the Egyptians reply throughout their history as a conscious, revolting and informed people who have never been a sublime or complacent people by humiliating and proving that it was the Egyptians who stood up to the bareboat on the shores of Alexandria to tackle the English aggression against their country after standing up to the cheeks of the conspirator Tawfiq who understood that he inherited the country and the worshipers to the father and Egyptian. It also addresses the Arab situation and the violent changes in the Arab political arena in those worrying years. Alaa Al-Aswani records his diaries, scenes and arguments with Egyptian intellectuals, Arabs and foreigners, all of whom are excellent in the style of a writer to whom everyone acknowledges that everything he writes catches the reader's accent and does not let him finish reading.[3]

About the Writer[edit]

Alaa al-Aswani was born on 26 May 1957 in Cairo, an Egyptian disciplinarian and dentist, who was a member of Egypt's Opposition Sufficiency Movement and actively participated in the 25 January Egyptian Revolution in 2011. He is now opposed to the Egyptian regime and writes a weekly article in Deutsche Welle in which he addresses political and social issues.[4] His literary work has been translated into 22 languages. The British Times chose him as one of the world's top 50 novelists.

Quotes from the book[edit]

"In each piece lies a small tyrant, the opportunity to exercise even once the tyranny on which he was subjected."

"Egypt has no civilian State until we stand with it or against it. The power in Egypt is an oppressive authoritarian military."

"The only freedom allowed in Egypt is freedom of speech.

Each of us will write whatever we want, and in return, the Government will do whatever we want. "[5]

References[edit]

  1. علاء الاسواني لماذا لا يثور المصريون. Search this book on
  2. Admin (2021-12-15). "قراءة في كتاب "لماذا لا يثور المصريون" للدكتور علاء الاسواني". العالم الآن (in العربية). Retrieved 2022-06-20.
  3. "تحميل كتاب لماذا لا يثور المصريون؟ PDF - علاء الأسواني | كتوباتي". www.kotobati.com. Retrieved 2022-06-20.
  4. "كتاب لماذا لا يثور المصريون ؟ علاء الأسواني PDF". المكتبة نت لـ تحميل كتب PDF (in العربية). 2020-06-07. Retrieved 2022-06-20.
  5. "لماذا لا يثور المصريون؟ Quotes by Alaa Al Aswany". www.goodreads.com. Retrieved 2022-06-20.



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