A collection of short stories for children from 4 to 8 years old.
In it, the writer tries to work on some of the basic concepts that she wants to convey to the Arab child in an attempt to emphasize the meanings of accepting others, tolerance, working on identity, and strengthening the child’s imagination. In the story of Tala’s Braid, the writer tries to work on the meaning of patience, optimism, and resistance to illness, for resistance is what saves us. Finally, do not give in to the disease.
In the story of the dream of the black duck, we find the duck suffering from lack of acceptance and exclusion, so it tries to search for this acceptance, and finds it from others who compensate for the loss of the homeland. In the story of him flying while stealing his shadow, you also work on the meaning of acceptance and the search for friendship, emphasizing that every story has more than one point of view to look at, and the truth has other faces. The eagle that threatens the rabbit is also forced to search for food for its young, and the caution that the rabbit adhered to Save him from the claws of the eagle, and the little bird can be wiser than the eagle, and so on.
While the story of Basma and the mermaid strengthens girls’ sexual identity and works to strengthen their self-awareness so that they do not fall into the trap.
Writings and thoughts from heart to heart and from soul to soul... written with stories, experiences and anecdotes...
Love has letters and words that are drawn over the lines...like paintings
Sorry, my love.. a revelation that takes us from earth to sky.. from sea to flower garden.. from meeting to separation.. from love to betrayals.. so that we can live the sweetest stories in once upon a time..
I Didn't Fail is a book on development and motivation that deals with the first period of a graduate's life and all the frustrations and stumbles he may experience, as well as a change in thought and orientation, and achieving career and life success. It deals with the era between 2002-2009, here I discovered; Endurance, perseverance and never despair. Written in 2009 and printed in 2015.
I did not fail 2
A book on development and motivation that focused on the period of assignment at the International Civil Aviation Organization in 2010, which is one of the United Nations organizations, and the many confrontations and challenges that occurred during this period with various nationalities, the period of intellectual transition to internationalism and the establishment of a negotiating personality, which was rejected on the day of travel until it became A chief negotiator with a vital file who travels to many places. The book also discusses periods of frustration, success, and learning from many Arab and foreign figures. Post 2010
Synopsis of Flynn's novel, Willow Roots
Flynn, the revolutionary slave, was born in the city of Khartoum during the Turkish era, bound by the ownership of slavery that he inherited from his parents, who were owned by the wealthy merchant Abu Al-Saud Agha. At the age of nine, his master's daughter, Khairiya, surprised him with a warm kiss. From his high balcony, his master watched the romantic scene, so he decided to teach his boy a lesson that he would never forget. He inspired Flynn's mother to prepare him for circumcision, so he castrated him. The eunuch slave grew soft in his master’s house, and the tragedy grew with him. He met Sisbana, the beautiful slave girl, the illegitimate daughter of his master Abu Al-Saud. Where a strong emotional relationship developed between them, it was like warm rain falling on a smooth rock. On his first romantic date, ugliness is revealed. Spiritual love, which transcends the desires of the flesh, triumphs when Sisbana clings to her love for Finn. Flynn decided to avenge his honor from those who had caused his misery (his master, Abu Al-Saud Agha, Al-Hakim Pasha, Mazhar Farhat, and Abdul-Khair, the slave owned by the Jewish merchant Isaac Levy). In a moment of sincere spiritual love, Sisbana inspired him to join the Mahdi armies that besieged Khartoum. With Sesbana's help, Flynn succeeds in escaping Khartoum and joins the rebel armies. There he met Sheikh Musa Abu Hajal, who refined his soul. Coincidence brings him together with his first prey, Abdul Khair, only to discover that he, like him, was a victim of the whims of his master, the gay Jewish merchant. Flynn enters the city of Khartoum with the revolutionaries to clear part of the debt stuck on the neck of Al-Hakim Pasha Mazhar Farhat in the hospital, where he meets his friend Morgan, who was falsely accused of killing General Gordon. But he fails to reach his love, Sisbana, and his arch rival, his master Abu Al-Saud, who fled to the city of Berber in northern Sudan. Flynn decides to join Prince Abdul Hamman Al-Nujoumi's brigade, heading north to chase Gordon's rescue campaign, which has reached the outskirts of the city of Berber. Sesbana falls into captivity and is taken in by the prince's lieutenant. She moves to live with him in the city of Omdurman, where she gives birth to a son whom she names Flynn out of love for her. Coincidence created Flynn at that moment and in the same place. After redeeming his religion from Abu Al-Saud, from among the willow bushes, Flynn witnessed the tragic scene clearly. The wooden boat is a burning mass of flame. Burnt bodies floated on the surface. A group of British soldiers boarded the boat. The child greeted them with two index fingers pointed at their chests. And immortal phrases (Boom, boom, die, die) like bullets that pierced their hearts. Flynn watched them pull the child out of the burning rubble. The looks exchanged between the thick smoke between Flynn and the child are like stray arrows that two lovers exchange, penetrating their hearts, exploding into a ball full of sincere sentimental feelings. A magnetic aura of attractive sensations and feelings fixed deep within the human soul with the pegs of human relationships. Flynn fell unconscious from the intensity of the explosion, while the English ship headed north with the young child on board. That scene remained stuck in Flynn’s mind, just as those phrases remained engraved on the wall of the mind of the little boy, Mustafa Wad Barbar (James Francis), like a tattoo of a Negro tribe that will never go away.
this book ....
“Features of the morning... the first of positive values and daily self-development that carry clarity of mind and clarity of thought... in which words came forth that were easy and palatable, deep in meaning and broad in significance, fraught with the blessing of timing... a brief description of a life that has passed, lost and whose promise will come... morning messages that may be gifts of experience.” For those who have not tried yet, and reminder bells for those who have tried and forgotten.”
About the book
A book concerned with self-development for those seeking happiness and positivity in a life filled with pressures and responsibilities. It is considered a practical guide with sequential steps to obtain definite happiness, from the art of landscaping the home to obtain positive energy, to changing negative thoughts and the role of the subconscious mind in obtaining definite happiness. It includes... These steps are quotes from various people regarding happiness and positivity.
The book consists of 109 pages arranged as follows:
- - Basmala
- - Dedication
- - the introduction
- - Topics are divided according to the number of letters of the alphabet, from the letter Alif to the letter Ya
- - the answers
- - resources and references
- - Contents
The book consists of cultural competitions in all aspects of knowledge. Each competition’s answers begin with a letter of the alphabet, and before each competition there is a verse of poetry that begins with the same letter as the competition, then a story that carries within it a lesson, or useful information for self-development and human development.
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Thank you very much
Everything has a reason, nothing happens without a reason. Few of the reasons we realize with our limited minds, and many of them remain unknown, known only to God, even if we think in a moment of arrogance that we have realized them. In this ever-changing world, there are only a few facts, in contrast to many hypotheses, and the eternal problem of man is that he is often hasty in transforming hypotheses into facts, until the moment comes when he discovers the error of his beliefs, and then submits to the reality, and admits the shortcomings of his understanding, and the limitations. Realize it. In order to live happily in your life, you must have a lot of flexibility. You must accept the idea of making a mistake, admit it, study its causes, and try to avoid it in the future.
As if we weren't:
Realistic novel:
Hind is a college girl,
When you graduate, you meet Hamid in one of the hospitals, or rather, you treat him! But with the days, their relationship develops and she falls in love with him. What is the end of her love for him?