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6th Moroccan Poets Festival concludes

May 12, 2025 / 3:40 PM
6th Moroccan Poets Festival concludes
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Sharjah 24: The Moroccan Poets Festival concluded its sixth edition after three days of illustrious writing and celebrating the word.

The festival was held under the patronage of His Highness Sheikh Dr. Sultan bin Mohammed Al Qasimi, Supreme Council Member and Ruler of Sharjah, and King Mohammed VI of Morocco. The three-day event was organised by Sharjah Department of Culture in cooperation with the Moroccan Ministry of Youth, Culture, and Communication.

Distinguished presence

The festival saw the participation of more than 40 poets, poetesses, intellectuals, and artists amidst a festive atmosphere of poetry and its creators. The sixth edition honoured 83 students in a poetry writing workshop organised by the House of Poetry in Tetouan, in collaboration with the Faculty of Arabic Language at the Higher Teachers' School in Martil. Eighteen students were also honoured in the regional competition for Arabic Language Pioneers, organised by the House of Poetry in collaboration with more than 37 secondary and middle school educational institutions. The festival was also attended by a large audience from various Moroccan cities.

The closing ceremony was held at the National School of Crafts and Arts in Tetouan, in the presence of Abdullah bin Mohammed Al Owais, Chairman of Sharjah Department of Culture; Professor Mohammed Ibrahim Al Qaseer, Director of the Cultural Affairs Department at the Department; Rachid Al Mustafa, Head of the Cooperation Department in the Culture Sector at the Moroccan Ministry of Youth, Culture, and Communication; Dr. Youssef Al Fahri, President of the Higher School of Teachers in Martil; Mukhlis Al Sagheer, Director of the House of Poetry in Tetouan; and a large number of writers, intellectuals, and university students.

Mukhlis Al Sagheer pointed out that the Moroccan Poets Festival strives to innovate with each new edition, and to grow in poetry and cultural resonance in the Arab world. He highlighted that the sixth edition enjoyed a prominent official presence, alongside a public audience with a passion for poetry and art. Al Sagheer explained that the House of Poetry in Tetouan, founded in 2016, affirms its tireless efforts to organize a distinguished seventh edition next year, to celebrate its tenth anniversary.

Poetry and the Performing Arts

The second day of the festival featured a critical symposium titled "Poetry and the Performing Arts," held at the Higher School for Teachers. Speakers included Abdul Aziz Al Halawi, Khaled Amin, and Youssef Al Rihani, with Houria Al Khamlichi moderating the session.

The speakers emphasised that when poetry is recited on stage, or combined with movement or music, it transforms into a performance art. This is where what is known as "the poetics of performance" emerges, where poetry emerges from the page and is embodied through the body, voice, gaze, and silence. They noted that at this moment, literature intersects with the live arts, providing the recipient with a multi-sensory artistic experience.

Speakers emphasised the intersection of poetry and performance, where word meets movement, voice meets silence. This is when a magic called the poetics of the performing arts is born; where the poem becomes a vibrant body, and the scene becomes a visual poem that is read by the eye and felt by the heart.

The second day's activities continued in the garden of the National School of Crafts and Arts, with a poetry reading session featuring Hafiza Bouamama, Nabil Mansour, Adel Lotfi, Abdel Azim Al-Haidawi, Najib Khaddari, Iman Al Khattabi, and Abdel Din Hamroush, with Maryam Kroudi introducing the session.

At the end of the meeting, Abdullah Al Owais and Muhammad Al Qasir presented certificates of appreciation to the students enrolled in the poetry workshops at the House of Poetry in Tetouan, in recognition of their creative and scholarly efforts in the workshops.

Special Poets

The Moroccan Poets Festival has an exceptional section, bringing the audience together with visually impaired poets at the Taha Hussein Institute in Tetouan, in a poetic and humane moment where poetry met poetry with a number of visually impaired creatives who drew inspiration from life's features and, from its details, wove their vast worlds. The poetry session featured Said Al Khamsi, Saida Amlal, and Mohamed Al-Amrani, while the readings were accompanied by a distinguished musical performance by the Taha Hussein Band.

School of Crafts and Arts

The Moroccan Poets Festival held its sixth edition at the National School of Crafts and Arts. The school hosted a series of poetry readings featuring Mohamed Boudouik, Ikram Abdi, Abdullah Benaji, Ahmed Raissouni, Omar Al Taous, Thuria Iqbal, Hafiza Bouamama, and Aziz Al Tazi, with the poetry readings presented by Mourad Al-Qadri.

Sharjah.. the city of culture

Participants in the Moroccan Poets Festival agreed that Sharjah has become a pioneering model in supporting Arab culture and actively contributing to shaping a new generation of Arab intellectuals. They emphasized that Sharjah's cultural, intellectual, and cultural achievements over the past decades were not a coincidence, but rather the result of the broad cultural vision of His Highness Sheikh Dr. Sultan bin Mohammed Al Qasimi, Supreme Council Member and Ruler of Sharjah. His Highness believes that culture is the cornerstone of human and societal development.

Participants believe that Sharjah's experience represents a model to be emulated, as it has not only supported cultural production but has also strived to create an integrated knowledge environment that attracts new generations and instils in them a love of reading, thinking, and criticism. They explained that many young Arabs who have benefited from Sharjah's cultural experiences have now become prominent voices in the fields of literature, thought, and the arts.

May 12, 2025 / 3:40 PM

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