We want to meet you. We need you to tell us what inspired you to stand up, what led you to fight, and what sustained you until victory. This revolution, more than any other, is in the hands of ordinary citizens who are willing to do extraordinary things.

We hope that as you read what others have to say you will be inspired to share your own thoughts with us. Whether it is a passing observation that means something to you about how your life has changed in these months, or an extended essay on your revolutionary ideals, we want to hear from you. Return to Arab Awakening

Nuclear Jordan: splitting atoms in a land of wind and sunshine

Firmly in the “solar belt”, the area of the world with ideal conditions for solar power, Jordan should strive to become the poster child for renewable energy.

Young Tunisian cigarette vendor dies of self-immolation

Hundreds joined the young man’s funeral procession in Jendouba and protested against the region’s poverty and economic marginalization.

Mubarak is a state of mind

Youths would just waste their lives away, willingly or unwillingly, it did not matter much: what mattered was that their lives were wasted. It was wasted on drugs, drowning in the sea while following a mirage, following false leaders.

Are they democrats?

The AKP has not persecuted journalists, so much as rather selectively targeted certain people and groups.

 

A third perspective: Stronghold Sound’s new hip hop album, Khat Thalet, reviewed

The lyrics are all in colloquial Arabic, with artists using different dialects and referring to idioms, metaphors, and historical events from a variety of socio-political contexts, targeting Arabic-speaking communities from North Africa to the Gulf.   

A toxic dependency: Algeria’s love-hate relationship with its oil

This year's 41st anniversary, celebrated two weeks ago, has been marked in particularly gloomy fashion. Reports have recently emerged floating the prospect of oil reserves drying up and arguing that new discoveries are failing to keep pace with production. This might well turn out to be the best news of all.

This week's window on the Middle East - March 11, 2013

Arab Awakening's columnists offer their weekly perspective on what is happening on the ground in the Middle East. Leading the week, Sidon’s Salafist Sheikh: the roar of the Sunni lion

Sidon’s Salafist Sheikh: the roar of the Sunni lion

Heightened security has so far managed to contain the Sheikh’s roving and provocative marches.


Israel: the bus route is the message

Today, walking down Shuhada Street, what was once Hebron's main market appears as nonviolent resistance against the street's new role as a space of separation.

When a hero doesn’t come along: Egypt’s wait for its ‘Chavez’ lingers.

In this crucial post-revolutionary period where a vacuum is waiting to be filled, no one, on either side of the political paradigm, is emerging to the fore.

Holding Libya hostage

By blackmailing the state and disrupting crucial legislative work, protesters are doing more to harm to the aims of the revolution than probably even the most diehard Gaddafi supporter could manage at this moment in time.

Tunisia: the backlash in women‘s rights amid the rocky political transition

The announcement of the long awaited new government in Tunisia coincided with International Women‘s Day. Ironically, only 3 women were appointed in the new cabinet. The exclusion of women from key posts in the government is not a new phenomenon in the history of modern Tunisia.

Harlem Shake Tunisia-style

Such a division over bodies stands in dialectical relationship to the division of the body politic in the country. It is a result of a polarized polity and the visible expression of it at the same time.

This week's window on the Middle East - March 4, 2013

Arab Awakening's columnists offer their weekly perspective on what is happening on the ground in the Middle East. Leading the week, Syrian colours: the greys

Syrian colours: the greys

Abu Abdo and Abu Hosam are just two out of millions of Syrians who don't see themselves supporting any side of the conflict. They are waiting for nothing and see no light at the end of the dark tunnel we are in now.

oD author detained in Dubai

"Mr. Ulrichsen believes that an article he wrote last summer "The U.A.E.: Holding Back the Tide," may have played a part in his blacklisting."
- Chronicle of Higher Education


Rita from Syria

Rap and the Arab Spring

Interview with Arab rappers Ibn Thabit and Deeb

Part 1 and Part 2 and Part 3

Full Event, Rap and the Arab Spring

Democracy and Islam

Sami Zubaida writes that the political fields and social spaces of many countries in the region have been opened, however chaotically.

Tariq Ramadan argues that we must look at the Arab Awakening in economic as well as political terms.

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Our Editors

Bassam Gergi

Bassam Gergi

Associate Editor of Arab Awakening is pursuing an M.Phil in Comparative Government at Oxford University

Mazen Zoabi

Mazen Zoabi

Translation Editor of Arab Awakening is a psychology graduate with an interest in film

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If you would like to support the work of the Arab Awakening editors, please get in touch with the Editor: Rosemary Bechler

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We would like to thank the Network for Social Change for their generous support of our work

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