Journalism and the Space of the Free Mind
Women and the Awakening of Social Consciousness
The Question of the Modern State
The Battle of Education and the Building of the Mind
The Features of the New Intellectual
The Shock of Modernity and the Western Mirror
The Seed of the Question and the Beginning of Awakening
Why Don’t We Change?
Arab Intellectual Development
Eid & the Arab Condition
Eid arrives as a question, not a decoration... We rejoice because joy itself is an act of faith, and we grieve because sorrow is a responsibility. O Eid, do not ask us in what state you have returned. Ask instead: with what action will we receive you? We want an Eid that renews meaning—minds that reject hatred, justice that is not postponed, and education that liberates.
Arab Societies & Comprehensive Chaos
Chaos does not fall from the sky, nor is it born overnight; it is manufactured slowly by hands skilled at speaking and afraid of acting. We wake to find the world sprinting ahead while we remain standing at the threshold of words. The simple, profound truth is that there is no justice without good education, and no education without justice. Chaos is not a fate but a trajectory, and the exit is a decision that accumulates. When the civil state finally reconciles with a living society, time here begins to move again—forward.
We May Contribute to Human Civilization
Civilization is not towering skyscrapers or roaring factories; it is a mind unafraid of questions. We must face ourselves with painful honesty: why do we remain societies that import meaning instead of producing it? We turned religion into a closed identity instead of an open horizon, sanctifying the letters while forgetting the spirit. History teaches us that the Renaissance is not born from rhetoric, but from the conviction that independent reasoning is worship, and that thinking is not a danger, but a duty.
The Painful Truth of Our Societies
Perhaps we were not defeated from the outside as we like to believe. Perhaps we were defeated from within, the moment we convinced ourselves that safety lies in silence rather than in asking questions. The painful truth is that history does not honor those who sleep on their memories. What we need today is not a revolution in the streets, but a revolution in consciousness. Nations do not die when they lose wars; they die when they stop dreaming.
The Spread of Corruption
Corruption is not a passing headline; it is a climate. And when the climate is corrupted, it is not one field that withers, but every season that falters. The most dangerous aspect is not its scale, but our growing familiarity with it. When we label it 'reality' instead of crime, and when integrity becomes an exception that requires explanation, we have already lost the battle. Real reform begins when integrity shifts from a moral slogan to an institutional structure—when the corrupt become fearful instead of proud, and the honest feel secure instead of isolated.
A Nation Waiting for a Mercy Shot
Tyranny does not merely crush its opponents—it teaches its victims how to tyrannize one another. When freedom is folded away, peace does not grow; extremism does. The cost of authoritarianism is a state more afraid of its people than concerned for its future. The exit from this tunnel is not a bullet that ends the pain, but a project that ends its causes. Nations that endure need a different kind of shot—a shot of awareness. And awareness is not a eulogy; it is a rescue plan.
The Sykes–Picot Agreement
The most dangerous legacy of that agreement was not the partition of land alone, but the reshaping of consciousness. It taught us to guard what was imposed and to defend borders we did not draw. Unity does not begin with removing wires, but with removing illusion. Perhaps we cannot erase the past, but we can reread it. When we redefine ourselves beyond those maps, we may finally understand that the pen which divided the land was never capable of dividing destiny.
When You Wake Up in a City Without Walls
The difference between two cities is not measured by the height of buildings, but by the degree of trust with which people live alongside one another. When we fear, we build walls. When we trust, we build human beings. Real security is neither imported nor imposed—it is cultivated. We are not lacking systems; we are late in building the inside. If the human being is set right, the city stands straight.
The Dark Tunnel
We have lived in the dark so long that we mistake the shadow for a homeland, and waiting for life. The way out of the tunnel does not begin with angry speeches, nor with a revolution without a compass. It begins with a quiet revolution within: a revolution of awareness that frees the individual from moral oppression and restores the right to think. We are not a nation without a sun; we are a nation that has stayed in the dark until it learned to live there.
The Tragedy of the Arab World
The true tragedy is not a lack of resources, but the systematic assassination of ambition in our youth. We have built schools that teach obedience rather than inquiry, and universities that graduate employees rather than thinkers. There is no renaissance without a culture that respects the mind and reconciles it with itself. Education is not about filling heads with data; it is about igniting the courage to ask the forbidden questions.
The Arab World the Sick Man
We are the 'sick man' not because we lack strength, but because we refuse to acknowledge the disease. The cure is not in cosmetic reforms or imported solutions, but in a surgery of consciousness. We must stop treating the symptoms of our backwardness with the painkillers of nostalgia. True healing begins when we stop glorifying a past we did not build, and start building a future we can actually inhabit.