Muhammad Zaki Abd al-Qadir

Muhammad Zaki Abd al-Qadir (Arabic: محمد زكي عبد القادر, ALA-LC: Muḥammad Zakī ʻAbd al-Qādir; 1 January 1906 - 7 March 1981) was an Egyptian journalist and multi-topic writer. Although he graduated from Cairo University in law in 1928, he turned to journalism. One of the 100 founding members of the Syndicate of Journalists in 1941, collaborated with various Egyptian notable newspapers, such as Akhbār al-Yawm and Al-Ahram. Publicly known by "Nahw Al-Noor" (Towards the Light), a column he wrote in 1950s, which formed the core of his new-style journalism. He also wrote many books in literary and non-literary, fiction and non-fiction subjects and was elected a member of the Academy of the Arabic Language in Cairo. [1] [2] [3] [4] [5]

Muhammad Zaki Abd al-Qadir
Native name
محمد زكي عبد القادر
Born(1906-01-01)1 January 1906
Farsis, Zagazig, Khedivate of Egypt
Died7 March 1981(1981-03-07) (aged 75)
Cairo, Arab Republic of Egypt
Occupation
  • journalist
  • writer
  • university teacher
LanguageArabic
Alma materCairo University
Years active1929-1981

Biography

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Muhammad Zaki Abd al-Qadir was born on 1 January 1906 in the town of Farsis, Zagazig, in the Sharqia Governorate under Khedivate of Egypt. A grandson of the village mayor, He grew up in a large house inhabited by the mayor's family - his paternal grandfather - which made up of several small families, and everyone lives together in one household supported by the elder father, He who earns the family budget from the income of his agricultural property and dividing it among the members. Muhammad Zaki's father was engaged in trade independently although he was integrated into his small family in the large family but using his own funds.[5] He completed his primary education in the American School in city of Zagazig, then joined the El-Elhamiya Secondary School in Cairo. Continued his higher education in the Faculty of Law, and obtained a Bachelor of Laws from Cairo University in 1928. After graduating, he worked as a lawyer for a while, then left it and entered the journalism.[6][7] He had to spend some years until he reaches the age eligible to be accepted as a member of the Egyptian Lawyers Syndicate, so he turned to writing and journalism.[3]

Journalism career

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He worked as an editor for “Daily Al-Siyassiyah” of Liberal Constitutional Party, then the editor-in-chief of the “Weekly Al-Siyassiyah”, A newspaper that gave him the opportunity to get close to a large number of Egyptian thinkers at the time. He focused on the two topics of fiction and politics in "Al-Siyassiyah" until it was closed in 1931. He established the "Al-Fosoul" in 1944, a popular monthly cultural magazine, then worked with the "Al Sha'b" newspaper in 1936, where he took the foregin department. He also worked as an editor in "Al-Ahram" newspaper from 1937, then he moved to "Akhbār al-Yawm" in 1950, and became famous for his column "Nahw Al-Noor" (Towards the Light), And headed the editor-in-chief of Al-Mukhtar magazine. [6]Nahw Al-Nur made his reputation as a journalist of ethics who reflecting "people's feelings and expressing their conscience", especially for farmers, workers and government employees before the July 23 revolution. [7]

He continued his journalism work without retirement until his death. During his journalistic career, he had a weekly literary-cultural salon which he held in his office on Sharif Street.[6] He is one of the 100 founding members of the Egyptian Journalists Syndicate in 1941.[8] He was elected a member of the Academy of the Arabic Language in Cairo, And he was awarded an honorary fellowship in Eid el-Fan (Arts Holiday).

Death

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He died on 7 March 1982 in Cairo at the age of 75. [9]

Works

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  • Arabic: علي فراش الموت
  • Arabic: عذاب الشهداء
  • Arabic: دعاء الخطيئة
  • Arabic: صور من الريف, romanizedṢuwar min al-rīf, 1949
  • Arabic: محنة الدستور من 1923 - 1952, romanizedMiḥnat al-dustūr, 1923-1952, 1955
  • Arabic: الحرية والكرامة الإنسانية : مجموعة أقوال, romanizedal-Ḥurrīyah wa-al-karāmah al-insānīyah : majmūʻat aqwāl, 1959
  • Arabic: صور من أوروبا وأمريكا, romanizedṢuwar min Ūruba wa Amrīkā, 1960
  • Arabic: أعيش مع رجل غريب, romanizedAʻīshu maʻa rajulin gharīb, 1960
  • Arabic: إرادة أم قدر, romanizedIrādah am qadar?, 1961
  • Arabic: ‏تأملات في الناس والحياه, romanizedTaʼammulāt fī al-nās wa-al-ḥayāh, 1962
  • Arabic: رسائل ومسائل, romanizedRasāʼil wa-masāʼil, 1963
  • Arabic: الخيط المقطوع, romanizedal-Khayṭ al-maqṭūʻ, 1963
  • Arabic: أبو مندور, romanizedAbū Mandūr, 1963
  • Arabic: حياة مزدوجة: مذكرات رجل أودعني مذكراته, romanizedḤayāh muzdawajah, 1964
  • Arabic: نماذج من النساء, romanizedNamādhij min al-nisāʼ, 1965
  • Arabic: الخواجه أبرامينو, romanizedal-Khawājah Abrāmīnū, 1966
  • Arabic: لست مسيحا أغفر الخطايا, romanizedLastu Masīḥan aghfiru al-khaṭāyā, 1965
  • Arabic: الدنيا تغيرت, romanizedal-Dunyā taghayyarat, 1966
  • Arabic: أقدام على الطريق, romanizedAqdām ʻalā al-ṭarīq, 1967
  • Arabic: قالت له ..., romanizedQālat lahu, 1968
  • Arabic: وعاء الخطيئة, romanizedWiʻāʼ al-ḫaṭīʼa, 1968
  • Arabic: غرام أسيف, romanizedGharām asīf, 1968
  • Arabic: الهاتف من الداخل, romanizedal-Hātif min dākhil, 1970
  • Arabic: مختارات من نحو النور, romanizedMukhtārāt min Naḥwa al-nūr, 1971
  • Arabic: ذنوب بلا مذنبين, romanizedDhunūb bi-lā mudhnibīn, 1972
  • Arabic: على حافة الخطيئة, romanizedʻAlá ḥāffat al-khaṭīʼah, 1973
  • Arabic: الله في الإنسان, romanizedAllāh . fī al-insān, 1976
  • Arabic: قال التلميذ للأستاذ, romanizedQāla al-tilmīdh . lil-ustādh, 1977
  • Arabic: أجساد من تراب, romanizedAjsād-min turāb, 1978
  • Arabic: الصدفة العذراء, romanizedal-Ṣadafah al-ʻadhrāʼ, 1978
  • Arabic: أشتات من الناس, romanizedAshtāt min al-nās, 1980
  • Arabic: مطلقة في الإنتظار، ونماذج بشرية أخرى, romanizedMuṭallaqah fī al-intiẓār, wa-namādhij basharīyah ukhrá, 1980
  • Arabic: مذكرات وذكريات, romanizedMudhakkirāt wa-dhikrayāt, 1982

References

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  1. ^ Abadha, Nizar (ed.). Itmām al-ʻAlām إتمام الأعلام (in Arabic). Beirut, Lebanon: Dar Sadir. p. 236. Retrieved 20 July 2022.
  2. ^ Al-Jaburi, Kamel Salman (2003). Mu'jam Al-Udaba' min Al-'Asr Al-Jahili Hatta Sanat 2002 معجم الأدباء من العصر الجاهلي حتى سنة 2002 [Dictionary of writers from the pre-Islamic era until 2002] (in Arabic). Vol. 5 (first ed.). Beirut, Lebanon: Dar Al-Kotob Al-Ilmiyah. p. 311.
  3. ^ a b Arab League Educational, Cultural, and Scientific Organization (2004). Mawsūʻat aʻlām al-ʻulamāʼ wa-al-udabāʼ al-ʻArab wa-al-Muslimīn موسوعة أعلام العلماء والأدباء العرب والمسلمين [Encyclopedia of the notables of Arab and Muslim scholars and writers]. Vol. 21 (first ed.). Beirut, Lebanon: Dār al-Ǧīl. p. 106. ISBN 9789953783260.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  4. ^ ʻAzab, Khālid Muḥammad, ed. (2007). Akhbār al-yawm : madrasah ṣuḥufīyah Miṣrīyah أخبار اليوم : مدرسة صحفية مصرية [Akhbar Al-Youm: An Egyptian Journalism School] (in Arabic) (first ed.). Cairo, Egypt: Maktabat al-Iskandarīyah. p. 245. ISBN 9789774521003.
  5. ^ a b Khidr, Abbas (1964). Ṣuḥafīyūn muʻāṣirūn, lamaḥāt min nashʼatahum wa-kifāḥahum صحفيون معاصرون ؛ لمحات من نشأتهم وكفاحهم [Contemporary journalists: Moments of their raising and struggles] (in Arabic). Cairo, Egypt: Dar al-Karnak. pp. 134–157.
  6. ^ a b c "محمد زكي عبد القادر". maspero.eg (in Arabic). Archived from the original on 20 July 2022. Retrieved 20 July 2022.
  7. ^ a b "محمد زكى عبد القادر.. قوة الفكر والقلم". akhbarelyom.com (in Arabic). 10 July 2022. Archived from the original on 20 July 2022. Retrieved 20 July 2022.
  8. ^ "المؤسسون و مجالس النقابة". ejs.org.eg (in Arabic). Retrieved 20 July 2022.
  9. ^ "إلى روح أستاذي محمد زكي عبد القادر ...لمحة وفاء في زمن قل فيه الوفاء بقلم : إبراهيم خليل إبراهيم". pulpit.alwatanvoice (in Arabic). 9 March 2013. Retrieved 20 July 2022.
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