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عدد المساهمات : 248 نقاط : 814 تاريخ التسجيل : 24/11/2010 الموقع : العوايد _ الإسكندرية
| موضوع: طه حسين Taha Hussein الجمعة 26 نوفمبر 2010, 8:22 pm | |
| [color=white]Taha Hussein
Name: Taha Hussein Birth Date: November 4, 1889 Death Date: 1973 Place of Birth: Maghagha, Egypt Place of Death: Egypt Nationality: Egyptian Gender: Male Occupations: writer, scholar
Biography Taha Hussein was born in the village of Izbet el Kilo (ُعزبه الكيلو) in Al Minya Governorate in central Upper Egypt. He contracted an eye infection as a child, and faulty treatment rendered him blind at the age of three. He went to an Islamic kuttab (a traditional school where children learn to read, write, and recite the Quran), and then was sent to Al-Azhar University, where he was educated in religion and Arabic literature. Academic career When the secular Cairo University was founded in 1908, he was keen to enter, and despite being blind and poor he earned a place. In 1914, he became the first graduate to receive a Ph.D., with a thesis on the skeptic poet and philosopher Abu-Alala' Al-Ma'ari. He went on to become a professor of Arabic literature there. In 1919, he was appointed a professor of history at the Cairo University. Additionally, he was founding Rector of the University of Alexandria. He wrote many novels and essays, though in the West he is best known for his autobiography, El-Ayyam which was published in English as An Egyptian Childhood (1932) and The Stream of Days (1943). An important episode in his life was the writing in the 1920s of "on Pre-Islamic Poetry" في الشعر الجاهلي in which he expressed doubt about the authenticity of much of traditional Arabic poetry, claiming that it may have been faked during ancient times due to tribal pride and competition between those tribes. In this book, he also hinted indirectly that the Quran should not be taken as an objective source of history. Naturally this book aroused the intense anger and hostility of al-Azhar and many other traditionalists. He was prosecuted with the accusation of insulting Islam, but the public prosecutor stated that what Taha Hussein said was the opinion of an academic researcher and no legal action was taken against him. His book was banned but was later published with slight modifications under the title "On Pre-islamic Literature" في الأدب الجاهلي. Taha Hussein was an Egyptian renaissance intellectual and a proponent of the ideology of Pharaonism. He believed that Egyptian and Arab/Eastern civilizations were diametrically opposed, stressing that Egypt would only progress by reclaiming its ancient roots. He met Suzane, his wife, while studying in France, where he obtained a B.A. from University of Montpellier and a second PhD from the Sorbonne in 1917, with a thesis on the 14th century historian Ibn Khaldun. She read to him as not all of his references were available in Braille. After Taha died in October, 1973, she published Ma'ak (With You), which chronicled their life together. Before his death, he was awarded the United Nations Human Rights Award He was a strong proponent of enlightenment, respect for reason, and women’s emancipation, and he insisted that education remained free, claiming that it was a basic right for every human being, announcing "knowledge is like water and air." He became Minister of Education in 1950, and the new government subsequently made primary education ex gratia, which is still in effect today. Works His literary works can be divided into 3 categories: 1-Studies of Arabic and Islamic literature and culture. 2-Fictional literary works centered on social commentary attacking poverty and ignorance. 3-Political articles published in the two journals of which he was editor-in-chief.
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