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Doug Kanter wrote:
"NOYB" wrote in message hlink.net... "Doug Kanter" wrote in message ... "NOYB" wrote in message thlink.net... What contributions would you consider valid ones? The light bulb, penicillin, the first computer, the internal combustion engine and the automobile, space travel, airplanes, pre-emptive strikes, and supply side economics. ;-) Hmm. No literature. Not surprising, coming from the court jester. lit·er·a·ture (ltr--chr, -chr) n. 1.. The body of written works of a language, period, or culture. 2.. Imaginative or creative writing I read a lot "imaginary or creative writing" everytime I read yours or Harry's posts here on rec.boats...or whenever I visit the NY Times or Washington Post website. You also spew gibberish when you're trapped. Trapped? By you? Puh-leeze. I asked you to name *one* Arab living in an Arab country who has made a significant positive contribution to society in the last 100 years, and the best you came up with is a guy who writes literature that 99.9999999% of the World has never read. Some impact! Source of numbers, please. And, provide an explanation for the author's presence in American literary critiques on a pretty regular basis. Well, there's the late Hassan Fathy, an Egyptian I knew and greatly admired. Hassan Fathy Fathy devoted himself to housing the poor in developing nations and deserves study by anyone involved in rural improvement. Fathy worked to create an indigenous environment at a minimal cost, and in so doing to improve the economy and the standard of living in rural areas. Fathy utilized ancient design methods and materials. He integrated a knowledge of the rural Egyptian economic situation with a wide knowledge of ancient architectural and town design techniques. He trained local inhabitants to make their own materials and build their own buildings. Climatic conditions, public health considerations, and ancient craft skills also affected his design decisions. Based on the structural massing of ancient buildings, Fathy incorporated dense brick walls and traditional courtyard forms to provide passive cooling. 23 March 1900 Born in Alexandria, Egypt. 1926 Graduated from High School of Engineering, Architectural Section, University of King Fuad I (now University of Cairo), Cairo. 1926-1930 Worked at the Department of Municipal Affairs, Cairo. 1930-1946 Taught at the Faculty of Fine Arts, Cairo. 1937 Designed and exhibited first mud brick projects - country houses for Lower Egypt. 1941 Constructed first mud brick structures incorporating the inclined vault - experimental housing in Bahtim, Egypt, commissioned by the Royal Society of Agriculture. 1946-1953 Delegated to the Antiquities Department to design and supervise the project of New Gourna Village at Luxor, to displace the inhabitants of the Old Gourna from the Antiquities Zone. 1949-1952 Appointed Director of the School Building Department, Ministry of Education. 1950 Delegated Consultant to the United Nations Refugee World Assistance. 1953-1957 Returned to teaching at the Faculty of Fine Arts, Cairo. Head of the Architectural Section in 1954. 1957-1962 Joined Doxiades Associates in Athens as consultant. Lecturer on Climate and Architecture at the Athens Technical Institute. Member of the Research Project for the City of the Future. 1963-1965 Director of Pilot Projects for Housing, Ministry of Scientific Research, Cairo. Designed High Institute of Social Anthropology and Folk Art for the Ministry of Culture, Cairo. Worked as Consultant to the Minister of Tourism, Cairo. Delegated by the United Nations Organization for Rural Development Project in Saudi Arabia. 1966 Lectured on philosophy and aesthetics in Town Planning and Architecture Department at al-Azhar University. 1975-1977 Lectured on rural housing at the Faculty of Agriculture, Cairo University. 1976-1980 Member, Steering Committee, Aga Khan Award for Architecture. 1977- Founder and Director, the International Institute for Appropriate Technology. Affiliations Member of the High Council of Arts and Letters, Egypt. Honorary Fellow, American Research Centre, Cairo. Honorary Fellow, American Institute of Architecture, 1976. Awards 1959 Encouragement Prize for Fine Arts and Gold Medal. 1967 National Prize for Fine Arts and Republic Decoration. 1980 Chairman's Award, the Aga Khan Award for Architecture. 1984 Union Internationale des Architectes, Gold Medal. (Source: The Aga Khan Trust for Culture. 1989. The Hassan Fathy Collection. A Catalogue of Visual Documents at the Aga Khan Award for Architecture. Bern, Switzerland: AKTC.) And then, of course, there is the Aga Khan. And Sadat. I am no fan of contemporary or recent Arab/Moslem culture or history, but there have been some significant contributors to the advancement of our society. |