Ahmad Hasan al-Zayyat explained

Ahmed Hasan al-Zayyat
Native Name:أحمد حسن الزيات
Birth Date:4 February 1885
Nationality:Egyptian
Education:Al-Azhar University
Occupation:Writer
Journalist

Ahmad Hasan al-Zayyat (Arabic: أحمد حسن الزيات) was an influential Egyptian political writer and intellectual who established the Egyptian literary magazine Arrissalah,[1] which is described as "the most important intellectual weekly in 1930s Egypt and the Arab world."[2] Born in the village of Kafr Demira, Talkha,[3] into what was then a peasant family, al-Zayyat studied at Al-Azhar University before taking up legal studies in Cairo and Paris. He taught Arabic literature at American University in Cairo, and for three years in Baghdad, before founding Arrissalah in 1933.[4] In the 1960s he served as the editor of Majallat Al Azhar, monthly publication of Al Azhar University.[5]

He sharply criticized Nazism and the ideology's racist views.[6]

Notes and References

  1. News: Ahmed Zayat's Journey: Bankruptcy and Big Bets. Joe Drape. 4 June 2015. 4 June 2015. The New York Times.
  2. Web site: The Arabs and Nazi Germany: Collaborators and Antagonists. Sonja Hegasy. 2010. 16 June 2015. Qantara.
  3. Book: حمد, أ خليل . المقال الادبى عند العقاد. 2018. دار حميثرا للنشر والترجمة. 9789776563322. ar.
  4. Book: Emmanuel K. Akyeampong. Henry Louis Gates, Jr.. Dictionary of African biography. 2012. Oxford University Press. Oxford. 236. 9780195382075.
  5. Gabriel R. Warburg. Islam and Politics in Egypt: 1952-80. Middle Eastern Studies. April 1982. 18. 2. 10.1080/00263208208700502. 136.
  6. David Motadel. Arab Responses to Fascism and Nazism: Attraction and Repulsion, edited by Israel Gershoni. Middle Eastern Studies . 3 March 2016. 52. 2. 377–379. 10.1080/00263206.2015.1121872. 147486609.