Личная информация
- Страна местожительства: Lebanon
Информация
Bashir Copti (August 11, 1929 - March 20, 2016) was a Palestinian-Lebanese poet, writer and publisher.
his life
its upbringing
He was born in Jaffa, Palestine on August 11, 1929, into a family of six boys and three girls. His father was a teacher of Arabic and mathematics for the upper classes at the public school in Jaffa, and his mother was fluent in three languages, including German.
He studied at the Archbishop Gobat School in Jerusalem until 1948, when events in Palestine worsened, and due to the continuation of the aggression, he immigrated with his family to Amman - Jordan, where he was employed in the United Nations and later in the Ministry of Finance. Then he emigrated again to Beirut, where he taught at the National School of Choueifat.
Undergraduate studies
While he was teaching at the Choueifat School, the director, Mr. Ralph Boustany, asked permission to allow him to complete his higher studies. He was authorized to join Saint Joseph University in 1961, and continued until he obtained a diploma in literature for a full university stage in 1964.
and his professional life
At the Choueifat School, he taught Arabic language, literature, philosophy and the history of science among the Arabs for fifteen years. He also taught mathematics to supplementary classes. He moved to International College (I.C.) in 1977 to teach Arab philosophy and history of science until 1998, when he retired. And what his students said about him: “Bashir Copti was a great teacher” and “gave meaning and purpose to all of us.”
the family
The poet is married to Violet Gredini, from the town of Majdaluna - Iqlim al-Kharroub - Chouf, Lebanon, and he has three daughters and one boy, and he has ten grandchildren.
His writings
His poetry collections
The Rebellious Flame: a collection of poetry of various patriotisms and lyrics
Frost under the sun: a collection of poetry of various patriotisms and lyrics
spiritual hymn book
The Story of Creation: A poetic epic from Adam until the coming of the Holy Spirit. (Dar Astarte Publications)
Al-Bashir’s Diwan: Contains poems that go with time, including social, cultural, human, flirtatious and political ones
Written by Published
Philosophical Research: A philosophy book that contains a number of topics according to the baccalaureate curriculum.
The History of Science among the Arabs: A book that examines the development of science among the Arabs, according to the baccalaureate course. And what the Arabs reached in the flourishing Abbasid era, it examines the topics of mathematics and natural sciences, pointing to the links between ancient and modern, indicating the progress of Arabs in science.
Dictionary of morphology, syntax and parsing: It is located in six hundred pages. It treats the rules logically, leading the reader to the conclusion of the rule, not imposing it on him.
An introduction to the history of Palestine before Christ: It sheds light on Palestine and its people since the dawn of history, revealing the stages it passed through during the investigation of the development of its people and the various wars that led to the expropriation of the land. It was written in both Arabic and English
Christianity in Pre-Islamic Poetry: A book that explains the poet's belief and his interaction with tribalism
devotional prayer book
prepared for publication
Greek Philosophy: An Introduction to the Study of Arabic Philosophy
Novels: including the Balfour Declaration
poetic models
my spell is torn
The poem “Mahjati Mazak” talks about a nation that lives without a dream and lives on its past:
Bashir Coptic, oh nation that lives without a dream
She regurgitates her past painlessly
She was tall
and distinguished from all other nations,
with their tongues and their heritage, and with what
wraps from womb to womb
Today, there is no womb to womb
yearning and no blood for blood
scattered scattered teams
I sacrificed without restraint or restraint
Bashir Coptic
raging flame
The poem "An Invading Flame" is a lyric poem from the Rebellious Flame Diwan in 1953:
Bashir Coptic, O my kiss, I fear life from painful separation
I am afraid that you will see you today with a maddened eye
And I'm jealous if the breeze messes with your sore chest
And I see the breeze in my eyes like a lover in love
Bashir Coptic
to Fayrouz
The poem "To Fairouz" is a revolutionary patriotic poem from the Diwan of Frost under the Sun (1970) dedicated to the poet S. p:
Bashir Coptic, my feeling of anger aggravated me
with blazing wrath
With vengeance, he wrecked her cauldron
and it was engulfed by nerves
My family is in Jerusalem and in Jaffa
Jenin, Haifa and the Negev
Mouths of bloody wounds
lonely moan of pouring
Enemies danced to a tune
groans and wandered from joy
Bashir Coptic
Opinions and criticism of the poet
What Professor King Abdulaziz said about him in the poem "What do the entrants want?" From Algeria, France, in his criticism of Al-Adab newspaper and transmitted by Al-Nashra magazine (page 1134 on Al-Adab magazine in 1957):
"The poet also talks about the people of Algeria, but with a burst of enthusiasm and an unshakable faith in their future and the future of all Arabs."
King Abdulaziz continues, saying:
The poem is not free poetry, as it takes the verse or its parts as a unit of the poem and adheres to that, and it seems that this poetry is more suitable for battle poems than free poetry.
The poet has a powerful poetic-rhetorical energy that brings to your mind the echoes of Al-Mutanabbi's poetry. His poetry is hot, rich in enthusiasm and musical resonance, which matches the subject. This resonance includes the reader and carries him above the wave of the flow, so he can hardly stop to contemplate an image or increase the meaning except with some difficulty, and he says:
I am still thorns in the throat of a prostitute, O people of Algeria,
The sun's glorification is narrated...before...on the waters.
In the poem, Where are you from, we must mention:
I am from Palestine, the sacrifice, and the pride of the rice is myself
From Ghouta al-Thawwar, from the edifice of al-Sanadid, the father
From the east of Jordan and Yemen, the struggle for life
And from the Hijaz is the abode of the clear revelations
The Arab Maghreb, the eternal Nile, and the Euphrates
source
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