Ghassan Kanafani is a Palestinian novelist, storyteller, and journalist, and is considered one of the most famous Arab writers and journalists in the twentieth century. His literary works, including novels and short stories, were deeply rooted in Arab and Palestinian culture
Ghassan Kanafani is a Palestinian novelist, storyteller, and journalist, and is considered one of the most famous Arab writers and journalists in the twentieth century. His literary works, including novels and short stories, were deeply rooted in Arab and Palestinian culture
For Bread Alone , al-Khubz al-Hafi) is a controversial autobiographical work by Mohammed Choukri. It was written in Arabic in 1972 and translated into English by Paul Bowles in 1973.[1] In 1980, it was published in French as Le Pain Nu in a translation by Tahar Ben Jelloun. The novel has been translated into 39 foreign languages[2] and adapted into a French graphic novel by Abdelaziz Mouride [fr].[3]
Until his early death, Ghassan Kanafani published eighteen books, and wrote hundreds of articles and studies on culture, politics, and the struggle of the Palestinian people. Following his assassination, all of his books were republished in Arabic, in several editions
Ghassan Kanafani is a Palestinian novelist, storyteller, and journalist, and is considered one of the most famous Arab writers and journalists in the twentieth century. His literary works, including novels and short stories, were deeply rooted in Arab and Palestinian culture
Ghassan Kanafani is a Palestinian novelist, storyteller, and journalist, and is considered one of the most famous Arab writers and journalists in the twentieth century. His literary works, including novels and short stories, were deeply rooted in Arab and Palestinian culture
I refused to worship God because I was immersed in worshipping myself and admired the flash of light that began to flash in my mind with the opening of consciousness and the beginning of the awakening from the cradle of childhood.
This psychological state was behind the controversial scene that recurs every day. I also missed the origins of logic and I am dealing with logic and I did not realize that I am contradicting myself as I recognize the Creator and then say who created the Creator and make him a creature at the time when I call him a creator, which is sophistry itself.
Moreover, to say a first cause of existence requires that this cause must exist in itself and not dependent or need others to exist. If a cause needs a cause, this makes it one of the causal links and does not make it a first cause.
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