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

This week's window on the Middle East - January 28, 2013

Arab Awakening's columnists offer their weekly perspective on what is happening on the ground in the Middle East. Leading the week: It’s not me, it’s you: a bad Egyptian break-up

It’s not me, it’s you: a bad Egyptian break-up

Just as Morsi and the Muslim Brotherhood have been continuously accused of hijacking and jumping on the coattails of the revolution, now the finger is being pointed by activists towards other activists who disagree on what the next course of action should be.

Israel: the whirlwind and the butterfly wings

Perhaps someone forgot that Rothschild blvd used to be Rehov Ha'Am: The People's Street, before it was renamed after the tycoon, an irony that seemed to come full circle in that humid summer.

After In Amenas: an Algerian perspective

The notion that this episode heralds a real shift in Maghreb-western dynamics is increasingly hard to dismiss.


A Somali perspective on Mali

Maybe the forces involved would rather continue an on-going battle against those whose beliefs cannot be supressed by violence.

Birthday with a Bang: celebrating Mawlid in Libya

Young men seem to take particular delight in lighting fireworks and throwing them from their car windows at unsuspecting passersby.

Silver lining of the Jordanian elections

Jordan’s parliamentary elections were far from perfect, but a process has commenced that places an important first building block in the reform process.

Turkish-Kurdish lasting peace, in sight?

The late Kurdish politician Serafettin Elci once said that this generation is the last Kurdish generation that has a chance to achieve peace.

This week's window on the Middle East - January 21, 2013

Arab Awakening's columnists offer their weekly perspective on what is happening on the ground in the Middle East. Leading the week: National myth in Egypt

National myth in Egypt

Unless we, the people, and the regime that is in charge of the country, admit that we are very close to rock bottom, we had better be prepared to face the dire consequences.

No anniversaries in Sudan

Every year, when a Seed-Ahmed memorial event happened in Khartoum or other cities, it would be prohibited or raided by the police.

Two years on: a revolution is a process, not an event

2013 has many surprises in store for Egypt.

 

 

A crisis in identity: Egypt’s opposition is caught up in a futile debate

Secular versus Islamist barely scratches the surface of the conflicts that best Egypt.


Don't hate the revolution, hate the power-play

Weariness with unfulfilled promises, deteriorating economic conditions and the rising threat of violence was rather visible on the day celebrating the second anniversary of the Tunisian revolution.

In Tunisia, another Sufi shrine is vandalized

For many opposition parties the government is not doing enough to protect the country from extremism.

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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