
This political satire, originally published in 2004 but no less relevant to our times, shows how to remain free even in captivity. With no choice but to report to the police station, Fathi fights to stay sane against the oppressive - and increasingly absurd - state bureaucracy. On the twentieth anniversary of the regime, Fathi decides to leave the roar of the parade snaking its way through the city and visit his mother and his girlfriend, but when he stops to help a student being beaten by the police, his ID is confiscated. Fathi Sheen is a writer living in an unnamed Middle Eastern country whose work has been silenced by the ruling government and its despotic leader. In Al-Samt wa-al-Sakhab, Sirees weaves an Orwellian tale of freedom, love, and resistance amid a backdrop of bureaucracy and despotism. This edition - abridged and in the original Arabic with vocabulary aids, reading questions, and supplementary materials - introduces intermediate and advanced Arabic language students to the world of contemporary Arab literature. The first annotated edition of Syrian writer Nihad Sirees's The Silence and the Roar, created for the Arabic language classroomĪl-Samt wa-al-Sakhab ( The Silence and the Roar) is an award-winning novella by Syrian author Nihad Sirees.
