Damascus-SANA
The collection “A Letter Likened to Love” by the poet Thabet Moallem was limited to measured poetry, adherence to its constituents, rhymes, and appropriate narrations to select topics.
In his collection, Syria appeared as the most important topic he chose in response to sentimental passion and sincere emotion, so he depicted much of the pain she experienced because of the terror she was subjected to, as he says in the poem My Wounded Mother, Syria:
My wounded mother had her legs soaked
Tears of blood and we will still sacrifice it
Say your voice above us a country
Like a kiss of glory and the Most Merciful, its protector.
Palestine was also one of the priorities of his poetic texts, so the poem of Jerusalem came on the activations of the simple sea, and he chose Qaf as a letter that contributes to activating enthusiasm, advocacy, and insistence on its liberation, so he said:
Jerusalem called us, bring victory and join us
And they lit a fire until the twilight obscured
They shook the earth in order to awaken our Arabism
And the wind cheers us glory and brilliance.
In his group, a teacher spoke about many emotional and human issues, and raised social issues such as interest in books, reading, and women's adherence to principles and morals.
The collection, which is located in 110 pages of medium size, and was issued in Al-Farazdaq Press, expresses the presence of cultural momentum enjoyed by young people and the ability to write.
Muhammad Khaled Al-Khader
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