Early on in Lawrence of Arabia, soon after Lieutenant Lawrence (Peter O'Toole) arrives in the camp of Prince Feisal (Alec Guinness), the prince moves close to him and while staring him in the eyes he says, "I think you are another of these desert-loving English. No Arab loves the desert. We love water and green trees, there is nothing in the desert. No man needs nothing. Or is it that you think we are something you can play with because we are a little people? A silly people, greedy, barbarous, and cruel? What do you know, lieutenant? In the Arab city of Cordova, there were two miles of public lighting in the streets when London was a village." There is both reproof and warning in Feisal's words. Yet given the manner in which it is delivered by Alec Guinness, there is also instruction, for he likes the young lieutenant. The question I ask myself is: Does Lawrence get what Feisal is saying by the film's end? His answer to Feisal, that the Arab people can be great again, is at once heartening and evasive. And as we see as the film unfolds, self-serving.

As he prepares to leave in the dark of night with Feisal's men, the prince stops him and asks," Where are you going, lieutenant." Of course he knows the answer, but he wishes to gain an insight into the young Englishman. "To work your miracle," Lawrence answers. Feisal rejoins, "Blasphemy is a bad beginning for such a journey." He asks Lawrence why he didn't tell his superiors what he was up to. "We can claim to ride in the name of Feisal of Mecca," Lawrence answers. "You may claim it," Feisal says, "but in whose name do you ride?" An abrupt cut to Lawrence and Ali leading Feisal's men toward the Nefu desert and ultimately Aqaba. For whom does Lawrence ride? He has finally begun his mission: he will see to it that the Arab world will be great again.


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Is David Leans Lawrence driven by a moral conscience? Does his desire to help the Arab cause arise from a genuine love of a persecuted people who were once great? David Lean does not attempt to solve the enigma of Lawrence; rather he plays on both Lawrence's messianic impulses and his clearly narcissistic nature.

w salam zin sm3iner mzyan 3nd tbiba matdich 3la dak taman li dayrin f war9a rahom dyarin 300 dh wlakin rah radi ykhesk tdi m3ak 1500 dh 30 alf ryal li ana tbiba katdi 300 dh w khask tchri dwa b 500 dh w diri radio dyal sder b 150 dh koulchi hadchi f nafs nhar w diri tahlil dyal dem ymken b 150 dh mohim di m3ak 30 alf ryal raha t9dek w tchit kanden 22000 ryal fiha koulchi wlakin nti di m3ak 30000 bach tmchi martaha wlah ysehl lik el omor inchalah fach t9rbi tdouzi nhdro ana w yak w nsa3dek f asela bye

wlat mafhemt men hadchi li gelti walo

khask tsouli ana drari kamlin li 3reft khleso 22 wla 24 alf

hadi jdida dyal 19 ans

awel mera sm3tha

3refti ach tdiri tasli b dak dakatira taniein w swlihom

hi doctora 3ndha l he9 f wahd l haja

machi nass bhal bhal li ana age kayhkem

hta fach jit l hna galoha lia

ana dert vacin whda hit age dyali 30 ans

wlakin ban lia dak taman bzaf li galt hia

rah wald l hram chefra

the 2nd msg :

so the girl now is askin aziz about how much did he pay the doctor khadija , coz she went to casablanca , and she (Dr.khadija) asked her 3200 dhs for a vaccination coz she is only 19 years old and her vaccination is so expensive .

finally the girl is asking aziz to tell feisal that it costs 3200 dhs cos she felt that he ( feisal ) didnt trust her .

the 3rd msg :

so now aziz is responding the girl :

i cant believe what u said , all the guys i know , they paid 22 000 rial or 24 000 rial

its the first time i hear about the 19 years old thing

u know what u gotta do , call the other doctors and ask them

but Dr.khadija is right about somethin

the age is an important factor

and they told me this when i came here

i did only one vaccination coz im 30 years old

but the price u told me is exagerated

she is a thief

You are selfish.

you are so lazy

you are not assertive.

you are unsophisticate like you do not know what to do with dpf, attactment and attacting picture on msn.

i know you hide something bad but you pretend to be honest.

you are very annoying to me when you act like drama and kid.

please be yourself and honest to yourself. just stop pretending and drama too much.

Journalist Ali Farsab was released on November 20, Feisal Mohamed Salih, who was media advisor to the Prime Minister when he was held, was released last Monday, Yasir Awad, the director of the Khartoum satellite channel, and journalist and Sudan TV staff member Maher Abuljoukh were discharged on Saturday.

He says that the operation took place as soon as he left the offices of El Jazeera, following an interview on October 26. The party that detained him did not reveal their identity to verify it except that they said they belonged to the Military Intelligence. The confiscated his phone, blindfolded him, and took him to an unknown location, which later proved to be one of the detention centres of the security apparatus in Khartoum.

El Seleik spent 32 days in detention, two weeks of which were in solitary confinement, during which he remained cut off from the outside world. He was not questioned, nor was any investigation completed with him until he and the other detainees decided to engage in a hunger strike on Thursday. They were subsequently released on Thursday, Friday, and Saturday.

Journalist Ali Farsab is still receiving treatment after a gunshot grazed his head, and he suffered a broken hand, with other injuries to different parts of his body, as a result of severe beatings by police personnel after his detention during the November 17 Marches of the Millions in Khartoum North.

Farsab explained that the demonstrators were subject to intense fire with live ammunition at about 15:00. When they tried to take cover, a demonstrator was hit by a gunshot in the head, and died instantly.

Three policemen then attacked Farsab, as he was trying to help another person who was hit. One of the policemen was carrying a Kalashnikov, which he pointed at Farsab before ordering the others to detain him.

The journalist was then was severely beaten with rifle butts and batons, and kicked with police boots all over his body, while he was still bleeding as a result of his head wound. The policemen also abused him verbally.

He was searched and when they understood from his ID card he is a journalist, they beat him harder, he says. He was taken to another street after the policemen noticed the presence of people filming the scene. They then took him to a pick-up truck, where he was tied hand and foot, and transferred to a pick-up truck containing a group of detained people.

The beating continued until 20:30 when they were taken to the Police Centre in El Mogran. They asked Farsab about his work and the press agency for which he worked, before they took him and the other detainees to the cells of the Mogran Police Department.

They said that they, as police, use rubber bullets, but that the paramilitary Central Reserve Police (Abu Teira) use live ammunition that kills people, and Farsab confirmed the existence of negative mobilisation among the police against the demonstrators through their speech.

The only son of King Ghazi and Queen Aliya of Iraq, Faisal acceded to the throne at the age of three after his father was killed in a car crash. A regency was set up under his uncle Prince 'Abd al-Ilah.[3] In 1941, a pro-Axis coup d'tat overthrew the regent. The British responded by initiating an invasion of Iraq a month later and restored 'Abd al-Ilah to power. During the Second World War, Faisal was evacuated along with his mother to the United Kingdom. There, he attended Harrow School alongside his cousin Hussein, the future King of Jordan.[3] The regency ended in May 1953 when Faisal came of age.

The overthrow of the Egyptian monarchy in 1953 and the formation of the United Arab Republic in February 1958 only provided impetuses to ideas of a revolution. The Hashemite Arab Federation was formed between Iraq and Jordan in February 1958 with Faisal as its head, which did not quell widespread opposition. In July 1958, a group of Royal Iraqi Army officers led by Abd al-Karim Qasim mounted a coup d'tat and overthrew the monarchy. Faisal was executed along with numerous members of his family in the process.

Faisal's childhood coincided with the Second World War, in which the Hashemite Kingdom of Iraq was formally allied with the British Empire and the Allies. In April 1941, his first cousin once removed 'Abd al-Ilah was briefly deposed as Regent by a military coup d'tat which aimed to align Iraq with the Axis powers. The 1941 coup in Iraq soon led to the Anglo-Iraqi War. German aid proved insufficient, and the Regent 'Abd al-Ilah was restored to power by a combined Allied force composed of the mercenary Jordanian Arab Legion, the Royal Air Force and other British units. Iraq resumed its British ties, and at the end of the war joined the United Nations.

During his early years, Faisal was tutored at the royal palace with several other Iraqi boys. During the Second World War, he lived for a time with his mother at Grove Lodge at Winkfield Row in Berkshire in England. As a teenager, Faisal attended Harrow School with his second cousin Prince Hussein, later to become King Hussein of Jordan. The two boys were close friends, and reportedly planned early on to merge their two realms, to counter what they considered to be the "threat" of Communism and left-leaning variants of pan-Arab nationalism. Recently, 143 drawings drawn by Faisal using either pencil or crayon were put on display at Iraq's National Archives depicting backdrops of the war he lived through. Such as drawings of aircraft, bombs, killer robots, and extreme fighting on both land and sea but some drawings depict more peaceful subjects, including landscapes, birds, and buildings, as well as maps of Europe and North Africa. These drawings offered a look into his mind during the chaotic time.[5] 152ee80cbc

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