The National - News

Arab culture is taking the world by storm

This week is one to celebrate a new generation of artists, from novelists to filmmakers

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Visitors to Alexandria’s Corniche experience one of the busiest thoroughfa­res in the modern Middle East. Less obvious is that at points they are mere feet from underwater stone ruins that for thousands of years have been submerged reminders of the pivotal role that the region has played in world culture.

The stones are remnants of ancient Alexandria, which for centuries guarded and produced some of the most important works from the classical world, while also serving as a centre of study and a gathering place for intellectu­als across the region. Its ultimate symbol was the Library of Alexandria, a vast institutio­n the destructio­n of which remains a mystery.

Since then the Middle East has seen many intellectu­al high points, as well as periods of devastatio­n. The most striking example recently was the actions of ISIS in Iraq and Syria. In the background, instabilit­y, oppression, migration and poverty have also taken their toll.

But across the region, even in its toughest corners, people are still making their mark. On Sunday, novelist Mohammed Alnaas became the first Libyan and the youngest author to win the Internatio­nal Prize for Arabic Fiction for his novel Bread on Uncle Milad’s Table. This year’s shortlist also included the first Emirati book to be nominated, Rose’s Diary by Reem Alkamali, which is set in 1960s Dubai. The National has reported on Moroccan novelist Mohsine Loukili, whose shortliste­d book, The Prisoner of the Portuguese, was inspired by a Bedouin storytelle­r.

Yesterday, all these authors attended the annual Abu Dhabi Internatio­nal Book Fair. The event, which began on Monday, is being held at Abu Dhabi National Exhibition Centre. The evening before the event began, global publishers and authors gathered for discussion­s on the challenges facing the Arabic publishing industry. The first Internatio­nal Congress of Arabic Publishing, which was organised by the Arabic Language Centre, looked at ways Arabic content can be supported and promoted in the digital age.

In November, Sharjah will host its annual Sharjah Internatio­nal Book Fair, the largest event of its kind in the world.

Further afield, Arabic filmmakers have been doing well at the Cannes Film Festival. Boy From Heaven by Swedish-Egyptian director Tarik Saleh had its premiere at the festival. Other works on show include Tunisian-French filmmaker Erige Sehiri’s Under the Fig Trees, The Dam by the Lebanese director Ali Cherri, with other works coming from Morocco to Egypt.

When these events pass, the region is also getting yet more permanent bastions of its modern culture and creativity. Dubai will soon open the vast new 54,000-square metre Mohammed bin Rashid Library, an institutio­n to match similar ones in the UAE, from Abu Dhabi to Sharjah.

The mystery at the heart of the destructio­n of the Library of Alexandria might never be paralleled, but with so much going in the region’s cultural scene, the intellectu­al chain running from thousands of years ago to today is still intact. No matter how great the challenges the region faces, its intellect will never be extinguish­ed.

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