ΒιΆΉΒγΑΔ’s Ali Ahmida presents at conference in Cairo, Egypt

Ali Ahmida

Ali Ahmida, Ph.D., professor in the Department of Political Science, has given a talk at the American University in Cairo’s Annual History Seminar. Held March 24 and 25, 2017, this year’s event focused on β€œThe Sa’id in Egyptian History and Culture.”

Ahmida’s talk, titled β€œLibyan Refugees in 1940s Upper Egypt: The Memoirs of Abdallah al-Qairi,” centered on Abdallah al-Qairi’s writings and the experience of Libyan refugees escaping Italian colonialism into Upper Egypt after 1930. Born to an urban Libyan family from Misurata and educated in Menia, al-Qairi then moved to Cairo where he received a degree in Arabic Literature from King Fouad University. His childhood in Menia had shaped his political and social views of peasants and anti-colonial struggles during 1950s Egypt.  After his return to Libya, he became a leading writer and a minster in Libya until his death in 1992.

In his discussion, Ahmida noted that one has to make a distinction between tribal and urban immigrants. There are two arguments; one on the larger historical context, and the second on the significance of al-Quiri’s memoirs about his childhood in the Sa’id . First, the new immigrants varied in their reaction to the new life: some kept their way of life while others, especially the urban immigrants, became involved in Egyptian life. Second, the Sa’id emerges as a diverse region where many immigrants from Sudan, Arabia, Libya and the larger Maghrib sought a place of refuge and settlement for social, political and a passage to the Hajj in Hijaz.

 

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