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in egypt? (if any)
and in the middle east?
and worldwide?

2006-12-18 19:07:32 · 3 answers · asked by Kalooka 7 in Travel Africa & Middle East Egypt

Hey, Yasmine, it's not "elbeit beitak" it's "el beid beidak"!

2006-12-19 16:44:56 · update #1

3 answers

Gosh thats a tough one
i'm thinkin and thinkin and concluded that i hate

ALL people in leadership positions - can u think of a higher level of corruption?

ALL politicians - no comment

ALL celebrities - 90% of them are wh*res and f*gs

ALL media people - even the ones u think are a bit objective are heading to the theory of "*ss kissing" to survive (like el beit beitak)

ALL fake embassadors of "good will", UN... - these are people who got old, and not offered roles anymore, so they are looking for another kind of fame.

so i'm left with the public, ok i love the public

2006-12-18 22:17:07 · answer #1 · answered by Yasmine 4 · 5 2

In Egypt, I like many :
Osama Elghazaley Harab, Ayman Nour, Mona Elshazley, Ibrahim Eisaa, Wael El Obrashe , Islam Khalil "The lyric writer of Shaban abdel Rehem's songs". I really like the last one.
In the middle east, "Lebanon" as a whole. As an example of people who fight hard for their democracy.
In the world, Mohamed Younes, the famous economist from Bangaladish.

Addition:
I would also like to agree with the Time magazine and vote for the "You" character ,or rather "we" character, on all regards, international, local and in the middle-east. "Tough age to live in"

2006-12-19 04:13:53 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 2 2

IN EGYPT NADA THABET(A LADY WHO DEDICATED HER LIFE TO MENTAL RETARDED KIDS BECAUSE SHE HAD ONE:HERE IS HER STORYندى ثابت امرأة من ألف مرشحة لنوبل للسلام


السفير
زينب غصن :تخفي المرأة السمراء النحيلة عزيمة قوية. تتكلم ببساطة، تعود إلى بداية قصتها التي بدأت قبل خمس وعشرين سنة بولادة ماجد ابنها الثاني. صوتها يحمل بحة محببة يبدو خفيضا في البداية وفيه الكثير من الخفر.. ربما لأنه يقف للمرة الأولى أمام جموع من الصحافيين الذين أتوا للتعرف على ندى ثابت، المرشحة المصرية لنيل جائزة نوبل للسلام، من بين ألف امرأة رشحت هذا العام بشكل جماعي للجائزة.

قبل خمس وعشرين سنة كانت ندى الألفي ثابت مجرد امرأة عادية أنهت دراستها الجامعية في التجارة وتزوجت وأنجبت ابنها الأول ثم الثاني. لكن القصة تبدأ مع ماجد الذي ولد مع عاهة عقلية نتيجة خطأ في الولادة. ولثمانية أشهر لم يكن الطفل يقوم بأي حركة كما أنه كان أعمى. تنقلت ندى بابنها من طبيب إلى آخر، داخل ومصر وخارجها، الكل أجمع أن الولد متخلف عقليا ولا يمكن علاجه إنما من الضروري معاملته معاملة خاصة.

تقول ندى إنها عاشت حالة من اليأس والغضب والعجز <<كنت أتساءل لماذا أعطاني الله هذا الطفل! فهو إن كان هدية منه لماذا أتت ناقصة؟!>>. لكن ذلك لم يضعف إيمانها واستمرت بالصلاة طلبا للعون حتى اختبرت معجزة تمثلت في تمكن الطفل من الرؤية. تقول <<في أحد الأيام رأيته فجأة ينظر باتجاه قنينة الحليب ويشير إليها!>> عاد الأمل إلى ندى وبدأت تقف إلى جانب ابنها وتساعده على التعلم <<كنت أتعلم منه ما يحتاجه طفل مثله.. وبدأ يكبر وتتحسن حالته>>. وبعد أن كان أعمى ومن دون أي ردات فعل أصبح اليوم يتكلم ويضحك ويسبح ويرتدي ملابسه بنفسه. فبعد عشرين سنة من ولادة ماجد تقول ندى إنها فهمت لماذا منحها الله هذا الطفل. <<كان ماجد وأمثاله هم الهدف لحياتي>> فوضعت مشروعا لانشاء مركز تأهيل للأولاد ذوي الاحتياجات الخاصة على أرض نملكها في الصحراء قرب الاسكندرية. وتهدف الجمعية التي أنشأتها في العام 2000 باسم <<قرية الأمل>> إلى تقديم خدمات الرعاية والتأهيل للبالغين من الجنسين من ذوي الاحتياجات الخاصة وأسرهم حتى تحولت القرية من مجرد ورش بسيطة للتأهيل إلى جمعية ينتج فيها هؤلاء الأطفال بعد أن تم تأهيلهم مخبوزات وخضروات يتم توضيبها وبيعها في الاسكندرية، ليستفيد الأولاد من مدخولها.

حضر عدد من الأولاد الخمسة والأربعين الذين تضمهم الجمعية اليوم مع ندى، فكانوا يتبارون في إلقاء التحية على الحاضرين الذين دمعت عيونهم وهم يستمعون إلى قصة ندى. أما ماجد فلم يتوقف عن الغناء وهو يستمع إلى والدته تتكلم عنه وعن أترابه. هو فهم أنها اليوم محط أنظار الكاميرات فقد رشحتها جمعية سويسرية من ضمن 1000 امرأة حول العالم لنيل جائزة نوبل للسلام من ضمن حملة تهدف إلى تسليط الضوء على الأعمال القيمة التي تقوم بها نساء حول العالم للتغلب على النزاعات والترويج للسلام بإيجابية.

ومنذ العام 1901، مع بدء منح جوائز نوبل، لم تحصل سوى 12 سيدة على نوبل للسلام في مقابل 80 رجلا و20 جمعية. ومن بين المرشحين للجائزة هذا العام المغني البريطاني <<بونو>> والبابا الراحل يوحنا بولس الثاني ووزير الخارجية الأميركية السابق كولن باول.
She works for the Village of Hope (VoH), and for the Presbyterian Evangelical Church (PEC).

Nadat Thabet is married and has two sons (24 and 26), one of whom has severe learning difficulties. She works in advocacy for the rights of people with learning difficulties through a network of 22 societies and NGOs working in the field. She has called for health insurance, a pension from birth and the issuing of identity cards. Her work raises awareness of societal prejudices and legal inequities in order to improve conditions for people with learning difficulties in Egypt.

She works in advocacy for the rights of people with learning difficulties through a network of twenty-two societies and NGOs working in the field. She has been calling for health insurance, a pension from birth and the issuing of identity cards. She works on the national level with the National Council for the Mother and Childhood and with the Arab Council for Childhood and Development.


She liaises with the social affairs ministers and key persons of the other relevant ministries to obtain full rights for young adults with learning difficulties and to ameliorate the laws regarding these rights.

She has been working in the field since 1986, preparing seminars, holding conferences, awareness-raising sessions and round table discussions.

Improvements springing from her work have spread, not only in the Borg Al-Arab district, in Egypt, but also throughout Alexandria and the surrounding provinces, fanning out across all Egypt. She has effected long-term change in the attitudes of many parents, sisters and brothers of young people with learning difficulties. By changing their views towards their children she has implanted hope in parents’ hearts.

Nada’s motivation towards social work, and improving the conditions of children with learning difficulties in particular, came sprang from her personal experience. “On March 2nd 1980 God gave me my son Maged. After about three months I began to question this gift; I felt he was different, his senses did not seem to function.” Thus began Nada’s painful journey with medical treatment inside Egypt and abroad. Maged was not improving in the slightest, with no hope he could be a normal child. He suffered atrophy of the brain cells, particularly those governing vision. Why was Maged not born like other children? Questions tumbled through Nada’s mind, followed by silence, anger, bitterness and resentment. “I continued like this until Maged was two-and-a-half years old, by which time I had completely lost all hope,” says Nada. She adds, “The strange thing is that this depression lead me closer to God, and I felt I needed Him more than ever. I prayed constantly.” She recalls, “As I was asking for God’s support and His Mercy, my tears brimming over, I saw that Maged was moving, and his eyes were actually seeing the things around him for the first time. I could not believe it.”

Maged started learning new skills, some that are difficult even for ‘normal’ people. Everything went well until he was 16, when he started facing different kinds of problems, such as having an identity card and being called for military service.

Although Maged’s problem has improved by far, still Nada was thinking of other people like his case. “I thought of setting up a place and called it ‘Village of Hope.’ It was established in December 2000, and by October 2001 it was nurturing six children with special needs,” says Nada. The Village has a centre for technical training, a bakery, carpentry, and agriculture to make it financially independent. From the experience of the Village of Hope sprang the idea of establishing a network of twenty-two societies working in the same field, to defend the rights of people with learning difficulties.(Read all on 1000peacewomen).

This month, Hiroyasu Kobayash, minister and deputy chief of mission at the Japanese Embassy in Cairo, and Nada Alfy Thabet, chairperson of the Village of Hope Association in Borg Al-Arab near Alexandria, signed a contract that will facilitate the Japanese Embassy’s $28,500 grant to provide a mini-bus for the village’s mentally challenged youth. Established in 2000, the Village of Hope Association’s main objective is to train and rehabilitate mentally challenged youth, focussing on day-to-day skills as well as income generating jobs. The new mini-bus will help ensure a comfortable and safe means of transportation for them. (See on weekly ahram).

“The problem here in Egypt is that there are no schools providing professional teachers for children with special needs,” Thabat told Al-Ahram. In 2004, Thabat began looking for ways to help the disabled students in the village have meaningful employment. The village started a bakery and a greenhouse that produces baked goods and vegetables now sold in grocery stores around Alexandria. Thabat hopes her nomination for the Nobel Peace Price will bring further attention to the needs of the village and those of the disabled community as a whole. (Read all on pastors.com).

Read: Invisible children suffering from nectlect. (IRIN).

Egyptiläinen Nada Thabet taistelee kehitysvammaisten oikeuksien puolesta 07/13/2005 Kehitysvammaisen lapsen syntymä on egyptiläiselle perheelle katastrofi. Rouva Nada Thabet käänsi omaa perhettään 25 vuotta sitten kohdanneen katastrofin menestystarinaksi ja tuli nimetyksi Nobelin vuoden 2005 rauhanpalkinnon saajaehdokkaan tuhannen naisen joukkoon. “Nobelin rauhanpalkinnon tuhat naista 2005″ on aloite kunnioittaa niitä miljoonia naisia, jotka työskentelevät ihmisoikeuksien ja köyhyyden vähentämisen puolesta.

she deserves to be the best in the middle east as well as the world!!

2006-12-19 09:29:49 · answer #3 · answered by Salwa O 1 · 1 0

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