Al-Arabi (magazine)

(Redirected from Al Arabi Magazine)

Al-Arabi (Arabic: العربي, lit.'The Arab') is a monthly magazine that focuses mainly on the culture, literature, art, politics, society, and economics of the Arab world. The first edition was published in December 1958, seeking to propound the ideology of Pan-Arabism. The magazine encourages public participation and makes use of photography and freelance work.

Al-Arabi
العربي
EditorIbrahim Al-Mulaifi
CategoriesGeography, Science, History, Nature, Literature, Politics
FrequencyMonthly
First issue1 December 1958; 65 years ago (1958-12-01)
CountryKuwait
LanguageArabic
Websitealarabi.info

History and profile edit

Al-Arabi was founded by the Government of Kuwait in an effort to establish a magazine that emphasizes Arabic literature. The monthly magazine has always been financially supported by the Kuwaiti Ministry of Information which is the main regulatory body of media in the country.[1] Ahmad Zaki was selected as the first editor in chief of the magazine and the first publication of the magazine was issued in December 1958.[2]

Since its first days, the magazine has addressed various important issues in both the Arabic and international communities dealing with all aspects of life. Many of the articles published were contributions from well-known authors, artists and poets; such as Abbas el-Akkad, Nizar Qabbani, Sa'id al-Afghani, Abdul Hadi Altazi, Ihsan Abbas, Yusuf Idris, Salah Abdel Sabour and Dalal Almutairi. The magazine stopped briefly for seven months during the Iraqi occupation of Kuwait from August 1990 to February 1991.[3]

 
The 1958 first edition of the magazine

List of Editors in Chief edit

  • 1958-1975: Ahmad Zaki
  • 1976-1982: Ahmad Baha Eldeen
  • 1982-1999: Muhammad Ganiem Al-Romehe
  • 1999–2013: Sulaiman Abrahim El-Askari
  • 2013–2014: Adil Salim Al-Abd Al-Jadir
  • 2014-present: Ibrahim Al-Mulaifi

References edit

  1. ^ Ministry of information of the State of Kuwait
  2. ^ Al Arabi Magazine Archived 17 September 2010 at the Wayback Machine: the Idea and the Reality, Al-Arabi.
  3. ^ Anthony Axon; Susan Hewitt, eds. (2019). Kuwait 1975/76 - 2019. Vol. 3. Leiden; Boston, MA: Brill Publishers. p. 342. ISBN 978-90-04-42381-7.

External links edit