Readuponit: Travel and voracious reading

Max Hartshorne, travel website editor, sharing some of the stuff I read, hear and see with you. Updated every day. Click on the photos to enlarge them.

Kifaya Echoes in Egypt and Lebanon

by Max Hartshorne on March 26, 2005

William Safire writes in the New York Times magazine about words, and he picked up on a new one floating around Egypt.

The country is ruled by a dictator named Hosni Mubarak. He wants his son to replace him, and the Egyptians are finally saying “Enough!” There was a protest last month with more than 500 activists who demonstrated against the regime. They changed the words to the Egyptian national anthem from “My country, my country, my country, you have my loyalty and love, to “kifaya, kifaya, kifaya!, Arabic for “We have reached the end!”

In Beirut, more demonstations were taking place. There protesters were also using this word, but to them it was simply “enough,” to Syria’s domination of their political system. It is, as Safire writes, “the peaceful battle cry of the fed-up, the one word slogan of the long frustrated. Kifaya, indeed!

Digg This
Reddit This
Stumble Now!
Buzz This
Vote on DZone
Share on Facebook
Bookmark this on Delicious
Kick It on DotNetKicks.com
Shout it
Share on LinkedIn
Bookmark this on Technorati
Post on Twitter
Google Buzz (aka. Google Reader)

Related posts:

  1. Bourdain Goes to Egypt and Smokes Like a Local
  2. If You Wanted to Open a Bakery in Egypt, It Would Take 500 Days
  3. An Scandal in Egypt
  4. In Egypt, There is No Escape from the Touts
  5. The King of Egypt Looks Wistfully at his Homeland

Leave a Comment

Anti-Spam Protection by WP-SpamFree

Previous post:

Next post: