Giuseppe Conte Wins Argana International Poetry Award

Poet Giuseppe Conte.
Poet Giuseppe Conte.
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Giuseppe Conte Wins Argana International Poetry Award

Poet Giuseppe Conte.
Poet Giuseppe Conte.

Morocco’s House of Poetry announced Wednesday that Italian Poet Giuseppe Conte has won the Argana International Poetry Award 2022, in its 16th edition.

“Awarding the Italian poet comes to honor the cultural and linguistic dialogue reflected in the structure and meaning of his poem, and the human dimension that this dialogue reveals. Since the 1970s, Conte’s poems have never stopped expanding imagination and horizons with an aesthetic sense fueled by the poet’s own imagination and wide horizons,” said the House of Poetry in a statement.

The House of Poetry grants the Argana International Poetry Award every year in partnership with the Capital Private Equity (CDG) and the Ministry of Culture. The award, worth around $12,000, is presented with a shield and a certificate in a cultural and artistic ceremony.

The jury of this year’s edition included Italian Academic and Translator Simone Sibilio (president), Lebanese writer and publisher Lina Kreidieh, Egyptian poet Ahmed al-Shahawi, poet Najib Khadari, critic Khaled Belqasim, and poet Hassan Najmi (secretary general).

The jury said in a statement that Conte won this year’s award for “his poem promoting dialogue between different languages and views. Conte’s poem expresses a vision in which the western and eastern cultures overlap.”

The statement adds that Conte’s poem features a silent strain stemmed from a “cognitive interest in the difference between the East and the West, and the myths and the paradoxes of the two cultures. But this strain doesn’t lead to any clash; it rather reveals a vital harmony with promising human capacities, because his poem highlights the love that exists in everything, and calls for investing this love in human connections.”

“The dialogue in Conte’s poem doesn’t take one direction, and isn’t limited to his writings about the encounter between the East and the West, but it goes in other directions, including the vertical orientation that prepares for the death-life encounter. In this context, the poet shows keenness to speak to the dead who didn’t stop producing thought and meaning from their unseen places despite their wise silence, extending the horizon of friendships built outside this time,” the statement adds.

Syrian poet Adonis had written the introduction to the Arabic translation of a selection of Conte's poems dubbed “Joy Without a Name”, saying: "His friends / have slept for ages / in languages, without a candle, and without a cover.”



First Major US Winter Storm of Year Hammers Mid-Atlantic States

 A person walks down a street covered in snow following a winter storm Monday, Jan. 6, 2025, in St. Louis. (AP)
A person walks down a street covered in snow following a winter storm Monday, Jan. 6, 2025, in St. Louis. (AP)
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First Major US Winter Storm of Year Hammers Mid-Atlantic States

 A person walks down a street covered in snow following a winter storm Monday, Jan. 6, 2025, in St. Louis. (AP)
A person walks down a street covered in snow following a winter storm Monday, Jan. 6, 2025, in St. Louis. (AP)

The first major winter storm of the new year barreled into the US mid-Atlantic states on Monday, closing down federal offices and public schools in Washington, DC, after dumping a foot of snow in parts of the Ohio Valley and Central Plains.

More than five inches (12.7 cm) had fallen in the country’s capital by midday on Monday, according to the US National Weather Service, with up to 12 inches in some surrounding areas of Maryland and Virginia. The snow was forecast to continue before the system pushes out to sea on Monday evening.

Severe travel disruptions were expected across the storm's path, and officials urged drivers to stay off the roads if possible. Governors in several states, including Kansas, Kentucky, Arkansas, West Virginia, Virginia and Maryland, have declared states of emergency.

In the wake of the storm, dangerously frigid Arctic air was filling the void, bringing freezing rain and icy conditions to a swath of the country stretching from Illinois to the Atlantic coast. The unusually cold temperatures are expected to linger for the rest of the week.

The Central Plains, where the storm dumped heavy snow over the weekend, were already in a deep freeze. Parts of Kansas experienced bitter cold wind chills, with values from 5 to almost 25 degrees Fahrenheit below zero (minus 15 to 32 degrees Celsius) overnight. The cold air will persist, with daytime highs only in the mid teens to lower 20s.

The airport in Kansas City recorded 11 inches (28 cm) of snowfall, the highest for any storm in more than 30 years, the National Weather Service said. The Missouri State Police said it had responded on Sunday to more than 1,000 stranded motorists and 356 crashes, including one fatality.

In Washington, even as the storm struck, Congress met to formally certify Republican Donald Trump's election as president. But federal offices in the nation's capital were closed.

In the city's Meridian Hill Park, hundreds gathered for a massive snowball battle, organized by the so-called Washington DC Snowball Fight Association. The combatants - many wearing ski goggles for protection - fired volleys of frozen projectiles, as one dog tried to catch the ammunition in its mouth.

"I did not come here to make friends!" Jack Pitsor, who lives across the street from the park, shouted with a laugh before launching a snowball toward enemy lines.

School districts in numerous states shut down on Monday due to the storm, including public schools in Indianapolis, Cincinnati, Washington and Philadelphia.

The storm also left more than 330,000 homes and businesses in the central and southern US without power on Monday, data from PowerOutage.us showed.

As of 1:30 p.m. EST (1830 GMT), nearly 1,900 flights within, into and out of the United States had been canceled, according to the FlightAware.com tracking service. Amtrak canceled dozens of trains on the busy Northeast Corridor line between Boston and Washington.

The three airports serving the D.C. area - Reagan National, Baltimore/Washington International and Dulles - were all open, with crews working to clear airfields of snow, but were seeing many flights delayed or canceled.

Virginia State Police responded to 300 car crashes between midnight and 11 a.m., while the Maryland State Police received 123 crash reports between 1 a.m. and 11 a.m., spokespeople for the two agencies said.