Syrian Novelist Abdullah Maksour Describes 100 Years of Defeats in New Novel

"2003" by the Syrian Novelist Abdullah Maksour
"2003" by the Syrian Novelist Abdullah Maksour
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Syrian Novelist Abdullah Maksour Describes 100 Years of Defeats in New Novel

"2003" by the Syrian Novelist Abdullah Maksour
"2003" by the Syrian Novelist Abdullah Maksour

The Naufal/Hachette Antoine has recently issued a new novel entitled "2003" by the Syrian Novelist Abdullah Maksour.

The book revolves around over 100 years of defeats and lost hopes starting with the character of "the grandfather," who was a soldier in the Ottoman army. He witnessed the dissociation and collapse of the Ottoman Empire, its colonization, the loss of Palestine, and the region's fall under the American dominance following the Second World War.

The novel continues with the grandchild, a Syrian dentist, who witnessed the occupation of Iraq, where he worked. And because the dentist inherited the bad luck of his father, who was among the first to join militants in Syria, he was arrested by the US army following the fall of Saddam Hussein. His story tells a lot about what happens inside the so-called US detention camps.

"The war was ongoing. Saddam had disappeared and was remotely running the battle. However, one night, he appeared suddenly in a dental clinic after he felt some pain in his molars. From the window, he watched the collapse of his statue and his rule. But before leaving the clinic, he left the doctor a signed thank you note that led him to one of the US detention camps. This country does not fear the people who live in it, but fears the dreams of the demon inside them. In this country, I lived on the margin, between the good people-bad people duality, knowing the difference – in its streets – between the opponent and the enemy. How did this country made me face these events before it shuts the curtains on the last scene of Saddam Hussein's era?" the book writes.

The writer has many other works including "Scatters of the Soul," "Days in Baba Amro," "Path of Pains," and "Dust on the Memory."



UAE, China Seek to Boost Cultural Cooperation

UAE, China Seek to Boost Cultural Cooperation
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UAE, China Seek to Boost Cultural Cooperation

UAE, China Seek to Boost Cultural Cooperation

The Abu Dhabi Music & Arts Foundation (ADMAF) has signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with China Shanghai International Arts Festival to boost cultural cooperation and understanding between the UAE and China, marking four decades of diplomatic relations between the two nations.

The MoU was signed by Huda Alkhamis, Founder of ADMAF and Abu Dhabi Festival, and Li Ming, President of China Shanghai International Arts Festival, in the presence of UAE Ambassador Zhang Yiming at the Emirates Palace in Abu Dhabi.

Abu Dhabi Festival and the China Shanghai International Arts Festival will collaborate on new commissions, co-productions, and cultural exchange programs for the time in the Arab world.

“This groundbreaking partnership with the China Shanghai International Arts Festival - the most influential Festival in the Asia-Pacific region - marks a historic first for the Arab world, underscoring the Abu Dhabi Festival’s pivotal role on the global stage,” Alkhamis said.

“Expanding to Shanghai allows us to harness the transformative power of the arts to build bridges, celebrate creativity, and deepen the bonds of friendship between the UAE and China,” she added.