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المصري حيفضل مصري. النيل رواه و الفول جواه
- فول بالزيت الحار
- أم كلثوم
- الفراعنه
- الفهلوه
- الجدعنه و التداله في نفس الوقت
إيه مصري جدا في رأيكم؟
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I’ve decided to come up with my new slang Egyptian Arabic dictionary.
Ta7aleb: something that turned out to be unexpectedly good. Origin: sushi is seaweed and tatstes better than you would expect seaweed to taste.
3ads: kalam faty. Origin: ele maye3rafsh ye2ool 3ads
Wa7ed Seeni (bel sad): ya3ni wa7ed kan under we ba2a over
Any additions?
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Al Ahram printed this article today, on the Egyptian Hospital in Bagram, Afghanistan. It is a small millitary hospital in Bagram which treats Afghan patients for free, providing artificial limbs and performing opthalmology operations. Led by Ahmed Ashry, the hospital has grown from seeing 100 patients a day to seeing and treating whoever walks in. This is a beautiful story of what Egyptians can actually do. The article was first reported by Air Force Senior Airman George Cloutier for the American Forces Press Service in the begining of October. Why did it take our media over a month to report something so special and inspiring? And why isn’t our millitary doing the same thing in Egypt? With all due respect to the Afghans, Egyptian patients need just as much help and deserve it from the government they pay taxes too.
I wish we could see more hospitals like this one and more people like the colonel who are willing to go the extra mile for people who need it.
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 Poison Tree
I just finished this book by Marwa Rakha called The Poison Tree – planted and grown in Egypt and still can’t decide on what I think of it. The first few pages were tedious, boring and felt like I was reading a teenage girl’s hidden diary; full of anger, frustration and hate towards her mother, men and society. I stuck through and it is as if you can feel the teenage girl grow and mature as you go along. Still every few pages you find her again, voicing her anger and feeding her frustration.
Marwa Rakha was the relationships expert on OTV and I always felt her ideas were balanced, fair and quite mature, perhaps that was why I felt the book was not what I expected.
I did enjoy reading it once I got past the first quarter. Although I don’t agree with the over generalization that men are bad, life is unfair and women get the short end of the stick all the time; I do agree that our society needs lots of change. I do agree with her ideas on not settling and doing our best by choosing happiness.
I am not pleading for drastic measure like divorce, imigration, the great escape or 180 degree career changes; I am defending our human right to choose. Our lives do not have to come to a standstill if we are in the wrong job with the wrong boss or in the wrong house with the wrong partner. We do not have to settle! We do not need to settle! We should not settle!
 Jerks Until Proven otherwise
She also talks about dating, online dating, divorce, marriage and prostitution among many other things. I’ve always hated the over generalization that men suck. I’ve always disliked negative generalizations in general. I don’t believe all men are out there to cheat, double cross, abuse and be in control of women. Yes, there is a number of those out there, but as usual those are the ones that are the most talked about. Do your friends usually come and say “My guy is wonderful”? No, you usually just hear the “he is trying to control me” or “he won’t take me out” or “he doesn’t do whatever”. As a society is it because “ben5af men el 7asad”, we always want people to only know the bad things to protect ourselves from “the evil eye”? Or is it because we are not used to changing things we do not like. I don’t think Egyptians like change. We like things to stay the way they are, the way they have always been, even if that means we are not happy. In the current crazy economy why are we still so insistent on holding on to things like expensive weddings, large apartments and unnecessary furnishing? I sometimes think that the main problem with marriage is that men are unable to financially make a marriage work. But this does not explain why many marriages fail even though they do not have financial problems. I am sure that like every problem it is caused by the two people involved. Even if one person is the main reason, then the other partner was passive, definitely it takes two to tango. When a woman complains that all the men that she has met in her life are losers, I am compelled to think maybe she is looking in the wrong place. People who call themselves “loser magnets” are usually just making the same mistakes over and over. I am not trying to judgmental but we can all fall into that trap of attracting “losers”, the losers could be men, friends, financial decisions, careers, or whatever. Accountability is very important, and we all need to understand that before we move forward we need to know who has ownership of what and who will be accountable for what. I think i went off on a tangent there.
The thing I disliked the most was the book’s cover, it looked childish and I didn’t get it , what’s a huge chocolate bar doing on top of the female symbol? Women are chocolate? Compared to the illustrations which are inside the book it is just rubbish, the illustrations inside were fantastic, funny and quite artistic, so I don’t really understand why they didn’t have the same style on the cover?
Overall, the book is interesting and is worth the time if at least for starting conversations in your head. Even though I didn’t agree with the general gist of the book I have to say the author put lots of effort and emotions into it.
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Seriously one of the funniest con jobs in Egypt. The article is dated 3-1-1948. A young man sold the public transport tramway to an unsuspecting simple man.
 Article Title
 Article
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 Book Cover
I asked my sister to get me this book from Egypt when she was coming because I had read a couple of reviews and was interested in what she had to say. I am always interested when young Egyptian female writers get published. I’ve always thought that the younger generations have lots of things to say especially the women. Amy, a senior editor at Enigma wrote a column that became a book.
I was sort of surprised that the book was only 94 pages, to me that’s more of a booklet, it is shorter than our washing machine manual. Nevertheless I read it all in a couple of hourse. It has been called Cairo’s “Sex and the City”, but I have to disagree. The book is about Amy’s trials at dating, Amy having to deal with what she calls Cairo’s elite society and Amy’s writer’s block. To be fair, the book was funny, light and entertaining but has no depth whatsoever. I always hope that once I put a book down it leaves a lingering aftertaste in my brain that I can think about. Once you put it down it is over. Again, to be fair her writing style is funny and very personal and you can clearly see her character and soul in it and you sort of feel that she must be a fun bubbly character you would enjoy having coffee with. It is more like a diary than a book.
So if you are looking for something to read at the beach or perhaps on a train ride then this might interest you. If on the other hand you were expecting deeper insights into Egypt’s society than go look someplace else.
Other people’s opinions:
Middle East Times take on the book.
Daily Star Egypt’s take on the book.
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