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Aqeel al-Mosawi

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Aqeel al-Mosawi
Born (1966-01-27) January 27, 1966 (age 58)
Bahrain
OccupationDentist (Endodotist) and Novelist
LanguageArabic
Alma materUniversity of Baghdad (BDS)
University of Minnesota (MS Endodontics)
Spouse
Maha Al Abbas
(m. 1993; div. 2001)
Amani Al Tawwash
(m. 2015)

Aqeel Mohamed Saleh al-Mosawi (Template:Lang-ar; born 27 January 1966) is a Bahraini dentist, novelist and photographer. He is best is known for being a consultant endodontist.[1]

Early life and career

Aqeel al-Mosawi was born in Noaim neighborhood, one of the neighborhoods of Bahrain's capital Manama. His father, Sayyid Mohamed Saleh al-Mosawi was a well known Shia religious figure, as well as being a poet and a writer. Painter Abbas al-Mosawi is his brother.[1]

After graduating with a dental degree from the University of Baghdad in 1989, he worked for Bahrain's Ministry of Health. In 1997, he received a masters degree from the University of Minnesota in the field of endodontics. Two years later he established his own private practice where he still works (as of November 2020).[2]

al-Mosawi is an avid traveler and keeps a wall size map of the world in his house where he marks places he visited. According to him, he has "seen half of the world".[3] His wife Amani Al Tawwash who is an artist is his travel companion.[1] He often documents his travels with photographs and blogs.[4]

Writings

al-Mosawi wrote two novels, Aryamehr Nameh in 2017 and Dara the Zoroastrian in 2021. Before that he had published many articles in local papers about his travels.[1]

Aryamehr Nameh

Aryamehr Nameh: Biography of the Light of the Aryans (Arabic:أريامهر نامه: سيرة نور الآريين), a historical novel published by Dar Al Farabi (Beirut), was well received by critics and was nominated for the International Prize for Arabic Fiction. The idea of the book came as a result of the author's visits to Iran and his fascination with its culture and literature such as Hafez, Ferdowsi and Shirazi. One goal of the novel was to highligh and rehabilitate the Achaemenid Empire, which German philisopher Hegel viewed as the beginning of human consciousness, and to cast Alexander the Great in a negative light; as an invader rather than great conqueror as often viewed in the West.[1] The 360-page novel is mainly set in the Pahlavi Era with flashbacks and events from other time periods as well. It was launched in Bahrain, in the gallery of Abbas al-Mosawi where a short video clip about the 5 year process of writing the novel was played.[5]

Nader Kadhim, a Bahraini author and friend of al-Mosawi praised the style of novel, viewing it as quite a bold move for a debut novel. The novel had mutliple characters such as Mohammad Mosaddegh and Farah Pahlavi giving their often contradicting perspectives on historical events, and it was set in three different eras of Iranian history, ending with the 1979 Iranian Revolution.[1] In a full review published in Asharq Al-Awsat, Kadhim said that Aryamehr Nameh was one of the good novels that were not only written by the hand, heart and mind of the author, but by his legs too, for he had travelled around the geography of Iran during the research phase, and it took him 5 years to complete. He added that the novel is both captivating and rich, and that its topic is unusual for Arabic novels.[6]

Esmat al-Mosawi favorably reviewed the novel for Al-Wasat, describing it as beautiful and captivating. She noted that the Arab Spring was one of the author's inspirations for writing the novel. She added that the author had applied his interest in stamp and coin collection, as well as travel in order to research the setting of his novel.[7] Fadhila al-Mosawi described the novel as an encylopedia of Iranian history, and she especially liked that the history is being told by an Arabic person, while at the same time giving it an Iranian point of view. She added:

The novel is captivating, smooth and attractive. It did not lack the element of suspense which holds the reader's breath up to the last pages as he continues in his eagerness for the pleasure of knowledge, and dives to the depths of an unfrequented world. It is a novel that satisfies the conditions of creativity, which makes it truly enjoyable.[8]

Poet Qassim Haddad jokingly told the author that he had applied his knowledge in dentistry to the history of Iran, following it from before the eruption of baby teeth up to the falling of permenant teeth, to which the author replied that he thinks Iran still has sharp teeth.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Zahi Wehbe (19 August 2017). "الروائي والكاتب عقيل الموسوي" [Novelist and Author Aqeel al-Mosawi] (in Arabic). Al Mayadeen. Retrieved 16 January 2021.
  2. ^ Staff Writer (November 2020). "Dr.Aqeel Al-Mosawi". DLS Bahrain Conference & Exhibition. Retrieved 28 January 2021.
  3. ^ Zahi Wehbe, Aqeel al-Mosawi (19 August 2017). الروائي والكاتب عقيل الموسوي [Novelist and Author Aqeel al-Mosawi] (Video) (in Arabic). Al Mayadeen. Event occurs at 6:20. Retrieved 28 January 2021.
  4. ^ Ali al-Qomaish (18 November 2017). "من التاريخ إلى الإثنوغرافيا.. رحالةُ يشعر بخيانة القارىء عندما يكتب عن مكان لم يزره.. الموسوي:" [From History to Ethnography.. A Voyager Feels He Betrays the Reader When Writing About Places He Did not Visit.. al-Mosawi]. Al Ayam (in Arabic). Retrieved 30 January 2021.
  5. ^ Staff Writer (25 May 2017). "الكاتب عقيل الموسوي يدشن روايته الأولى "اريامهر نامه"" [Author Aqeel al-Mosawi launched his debut novel "Aryamehr Nameh"]. Al-Wasat (in Arabic). Retrieved 29 January 2021.
  6. ^ Nader Kadhim (30 May 2017). "رواية «أريامهر نامه» تقتحم عالم إيران بكل تعقيداته" [Aryamehr Nameh Novel Storms The World of Iran With its Complexities]. Asharq Al-Awsat (in Arabic). Retrieved 29 January 2021.
  7. ^ Esmat al-Mosawi (24 May 2017). "المغامرة الروائية الأولى" [The First Novelistic Adventure] (in Arabic). Retrieved 29 January 2021.
  8. ^ Fadhila al-Mosawi (16 May 2017). "إيران... و«سيرة نور الآريين» للموسوي" [Iran... and Biography of the Light of the Aryans for al-Mosawi]. Al-Wasat (in Arabic). Retrieved 29 January 2021.