Lebanon’s Kahlil Gibran: The voice that united the East and the West

Almost a century after the publication of ‘The Prophet,’ Kahlil Gibran’s popularity continues to soar from generation to generation. (Getty Images) 
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Updated 27 October 2022
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Lebanon’s Kahlil Gibran: The voice that united the East and the West

  • For this week’s edition of our series on Arab icons, we profile the late Lebanese American artist Kahlil Gibran
  • The writer of ‘The Prophet’ continues to strike a chord with audiences across the world more than 90 years after his death

DUBAI: As a writer and painter who was equally accomplished in both disciplines, Kahlil Gibran is undoubtedly one of Middle East’s greatest cultural exports. The Lebanese-American artist, author and philosopher is best known for his 1923 book of prose poetry “The Prophet,” a book of 26 prose poetry fables written in English.

And while his work in English proved popular among the masses, the critical response, at the time, was less forgiving, perhaps because many of those critics didn’t yet have the tools to fairly judge a writer with strong Eastern influences.

Almost a century after the publication of “The Prophet,” however, Gibran’s popularity continues to soar from generation to generation.

“Gibran was the voice of the East that finally made it to the West and found that the West was hungry for spirituality,” Glen Kalem-Habib, a Lebanese-Australian filmmaker and research historian, and founder of the Kahlil Gibran Collective, tells Arab News. “Just take a look at the time period that he was around. There were a lot of great thinkers, poets, writers and artists and they all congregated in New York. So it was a great melting pot and Gibran had his finger on the on the pulse. He knew something great was coming; there was this industrialized nation that was being born and all this new technology coming out, there were such great innovations and thinking. So I think Gibran was kind of saying, ‘All these great technologies are going to help people. I’m going to write a book that helps people as well.’ And he did this by using his voice from the East that was Arabic in thought and process, because he was part of this incredible history of an area that dates back aeons. He was aware of that and he was in tune with that, whether it was the ‘Epic of Gilgamesh’ right through to the Bible and the Qur’an. It all happened in his backyard.”

Gibran was born in 1883 in the village of Bsharri near Mount Lebanon to Khalil Sa’ad Gibran and Kamila Rahmeh, both Maronite Christians. While his mother encouraged his sensitive and artistic nature (she famously gifted him a book featuring artwork by Michelangelo, which spurred in him a lifelong love for the artist and art in general), his father was a more sporadic presence.

After years of poverty and uncertainty, Kamila packed up her four children and moved to Boston to live with her relatives, leaving Gibran’s father behind in Lebanon. Kamila and the kids settled in Boston’s South End, at the time the second-largest Syrian-Lebanese-American community in the US.

Gibran, almost a teenager at the time, went to the Josiah Quincy School, where teachers soon noticed his artistic ability and he was soon also enrolled into the nearby art school, Denison House, where he was introduced to the avant-garde Boston artist F. Holland Day.

Gibran flourished. He quickly absorbed the works of Shakespeare, William Blake, W.B. Yeats and T.S. Eliot. “He was looking to make his mark. He was someone who lived a very sheltered life. Bsharri was so far removed, even from Beirut. So imagine, you know, 100-plus years ago, there wasn’t much (there) you could read, right? I’m pretty sure that it was very limited. So, one of the early impactful books he read was ‘Thus Spoke Zarathustra’ by Nietzsche. He was also inspired by Wagner’s music. His first published book was a treatise on Arabic music inspired by Wagner,” says Kalem-Habib.

Gibran was also heavily influenced by Arab literature and art, including “One Thousand and One Nights” and the ancient epic “Layla and Majnun.”

“He was sort of fusing all of these influences into (something) no one ever did before. And he really, really nailed it,” Kalem-Habib says.




A still from the 2014 animated movie 'Kahlil Gibran's The Prophet.' (GKIDS)

Gibran continues to find new audiences. In 2014, Mexican actress Salma Hayek — whose father is of Lebanese descent — produced an animated film adapting Gibran’s work, titled “Kahlil Gibran’s The Prophet.”

While Hayek’s first exposure to Gibran was through her late Lebanese grandfather, she rediscovered the book years later as a college student, an experience that she told Entertainment Weekly “was very meaningful to me, because I felt like my grandfather was teaching me about life even though he was gone.”

Discussing the film, Hayek said, “I think it’s important that people remember there’s an Arab-American writer that wrote a book that has touched so many people. It’s sold more than 120 million copies around the world and it has influenced the lives of people of all religions and creeds, ages, colors, and backgrounds. And I think that’s relevant today. I also think it’s important that we are exposed to material that reminds us of the beauty of our humanity.”

A less high-profile but equally important adaptation came in the form of the stage musical “Broken Wings,” adapted from Gibran’s 1912 autobiographical novel.

Written by Lebanese-English West End star Nadim Naaman and Qatari composer Dana Al-Fardan, the musical is a love letter to Gibran and the Middle East. 

“Dana and I were introduced by mutual friends back in 2016. She was in London for a concert of her own and I was performing in ‘The Phantom of The Opera’ at the time. We discovered that we both wanted to write a musical of Middle Eastern heritage which would shine a positive light on the region. Kahlil Gibran immediately stood out as an iconic Middle Eastern figure who has transcended borders and is revered in the Middle East, Europe and America,” Naaman explains. “He became a perfect focus for us: to pay tribute to him and Lebanon and also to introduce him to a wider audience and celebrate his contribution to the literary world.

“Gibran has always resonated strongly with me. His books were scattered throughout my family home as a child, his words recited at weddings, at funerals and graduations. Furthermore, as a man of Lebanese heritage who has spent his life in the West, I relate strongly to the fact that Gibran, and many other Lebanese, have spent more of their lives outside of the country than in it. As an actor, musician and writer trying to represent Lebanon internationally, there is no better role model than Gibran,” he adds.

Since it was first published, “The Prophet” has never been out of print. It has been translated into more than 100 languages, making it among the top 10 most translated books in history. Its popularity soared in the 1960s, when American counterculture was on the rise, and later among the New Age movements. 

To celebrate the book’s centenary next year, Kalem-Habib’s collective is organizing several events across the US and possibly Middle East and will unveil a new monument in New York, a city where Gibran spent a considerable amount of time and where he took his last breath in 1931, aged 48.

“Gibran was so ahead of his time. He represents many philosophical and moral ideas that the world continues to strive towards in 2022,” says Naaman. “Here was a Middle Eastern immigrant who found a new home in the West, and was writing one century ago about gender equality and women’s rights, about harmony and tolerance between religions and nationalities, about the corruption of politicians and mistreatment of the working classes, about the ability to build a new home and find belonging if one has to leave one’s own birthplace. Essentially, these all remain mainstream narratives in the global media.”


Cristiano Ronaldo, Georgina Rodriguez star in Saudi cruise campaign

Updated 11 April 2025
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Cristiano Ronaldo, Georgina Rodriguez star in Saudi cruise campaign

DUBAI: Portuguese footballer Cristiano Ronaldo and Argentine model Georgina Rodriguez appeared together in a new campaign for Saudi Arabia’s luxury cruise line, Aroya Cruises. 

In the video, the pair exchange a lighthearted moment in Arabic, with Rodriguez saying “yalla” after selecting the cruise on her phone and Ronaldo replying with a cheerful “yalla,” meaning “let’s go.” 

The campaign then transitions into scenes of the couple exploring the cruise experience, showcasing panoramic sea views, luxurious interiors, and their private accommodation on board.

Both Ronaldo and Rodriguez shared the campaign on their social media profiles, captioning the post: “Home isn’t just a place—it’s a feeling.” 

The Aroya cruise ship features a range of amenities, including a spa, multiple restaurants, a theater, water park, retail area, kids’ zone and several swimming pools.

Currently operating primarily from Jeddah, Aroya Cruises offers voyages across the Red Sea, with stops at destinations such as Sharm El-Sheikh in Egypt, Aqaba in Jordan and Jabal Al-Sabaya Island.

Starting June 2025, the cruise line will expand its operations to the Eastern Mediterranean, with new itineraries departing from Istanbul and visiting ports in Greece and Turkiye, including Mykonos, Rhodes and Antalya.


May Calamawy, May Elghety join cast of Lee Cronin’s ‘The Mummy’

Updated 11 April 2025
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May Calamawy, May Elghety join cast of Lee Cronin’s ‘The Mummy’

DUBAI: Egyptian actresses May Calamawy and May Elghety have joined the cast of “The Mummy,” a new feature from award-winning Irish writer and director Lee Cronin.

Calamawy, who is also Palestinian, and Elghety star alongside Mexican actress Veronica Falcon, as well as previously announced cast members Jack Reynor and Laia Costa. 

 Plot details for the film remain undisclosed. 

The film is produced by Blumhouse, Atomic Monster, and New Line Cinema, and is currently in production in Ireland and Spain.

Calamawy is best known for her role as Layla El-Faouly in Marvel’s “Moon Knight” and as Dena Hassan in the critically acclaimed series “Ramy.” 

Elghety gained attention for her breakthrough role in the award-winning Egyptian film “Clash” (2016), which opened the Un Certain Regard section at Cannes.
 


Tamtam’s Goast Flower: Growing a vibrant Saudi music community

Updated 27 min 50 sec ago
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Tamtam’s Goast Flower: Growing a vibrant Saudi music community

ALKHOBAR: With her signature curls and radiant smile, internationally acclaimed Saudi singer-songwriter Tamtam brought her boundless energy to Alkhobar this week, aiming to nurture and connect the Kingdom’s growing music scene from the ground up.

Known mononymously as Tamtam, the artist chose early in her career to go by a single name — a decision that helped to maintain her privacy while allowing listeners to focus on her message and music. Over time, the name became synonymous with her genre-blending sound and global appeal by singing in both English and Arabic, and her bold advocacy for creative freedom.

The event, hosted at Bohemia Cafe and supported by MDLBEAST Radio, was part of Goast Flower’s community activation — a grassroots initiative launched by Tamtam to support emerging artists and independent creatives. The gathering transformed the space into a pop-up creative hub, where artists exchanged merchandise, contacts and ideas over coffee — free to anyone with a hand stamp at the door. Entrance was free with sign-up, allowing MDLBeast Radio to collect people’s contact information to stay connected.

The event at Bohemia was hosted by MDLBEAST Radio’s Ninyaz Aziza along with Tamtam. 

The event, hosted at Bohemia Cafe and supported by MDLBEAST Radio, was part of Goast Flower’s community activation — a grassroots initiative launched by Tamtam to support emerging artists and independent creatives. (AN photo)

MDLBEAST Radio co-hosted their first such event in Tamtam’s hometown, Riyadh, a few weeks earlier — a sahoor at Beast House — and this was their second stop on this mission.

“Honestly, I’m so, so happy. This is really cool because we get to play the music,” Tamtam told Arab News.

During the Riyadh sahoor, they merely mingled but did not perform or listen to music.

“In Alkhobar, so many people showed up — people are excited. There aren’t many events going on in Alkhobar, so I really feel like everyone is super appreciative,” Tamtam said.

Zamzam with their merch exchange swag. (Photo by Goast Flower)

She added: “The whole point of this is for artists and people in the music industry to meet, and that’s what’s happening. Like literally everyone’s telling me, ‘I’ve met so many people, thank you so much.’ I’m so happy — we need it. The goal has been achieved again.”

Raised in Riyadh and now based between the Kingdom and Los Angeles, Tamtam’s music explores themes of identity, gender equality and cultural connection. She blends alternative R&B with pop and personal storytelling, and her independent streak led her to create her own platform for creative control.

“Goast Flower is an independent music label I started a couple of years ago,” she said. “I’ve been releasing my music through it — it was a way for me as an independent artist to have my own label because I don’t want to be controlled by anyone. It’s amazing to have that freedom as an artist. I’m very grateful.”

(AN photo)

Beyond being a label, Goast Flower functions as a creative hub. Its first major project, the Saudi Music Community, is a public database designed to help local talent connect.

“I literally collected all the artists I knew. Fulana, another Saudi artist, collected all the artists she knew. We put together a Google document and made it live,” she explained. “Now there’s another document where people can join and add their information, and someone checks it. In this way, artists can find each other in Saudi Arabia. A lot of artists are like, ‘Hey, I’m looking for a female rapper,’ or ‘I’m looking for a guitar player for my live show.’ And now they can just go to the database and find people.”

In Alkhobar, the idea found fertile ground.

Singer-songwriter, architect, photographer and university professor, Yazeed Al-Amasi, who attended both the Riyadh and Alkhobar events, said: “I’ve been living here in Dhahran since 2011, and this is the first time I feel super connected to the music community,” he told Arab News. “I don’t want to say it, but I think people are friendlier and more open to collaborating in Alkhobar. Or maybe people in Riyadh were just tired from Ramadan.”

Tamtam meets Zamzam. (AN photo)

A key part of the gathering was the merchandise exchange, a concept introduced by Tamtam to encourage artistic support without the barrier of money. Participants brought T-shirts, lyric booklets, CDs, stickers and creative works to swap with one another — artist to artist.

“The idea is that instead of spending money, artists are supporting each other. It’s a gesture of support that this community is all about,” Tamtam said.

“I really, really believe in this community, and I don’t think anyone can grow without a community in any industry,” she added. “I just feel like the music industry in Saudi needs this push, and the foundation needs to be stronger.”

During the event, guests took the mic to introduce themselves and share what they were seeking — producers, vocalists, instrumentalists, collaborators. Photographers offering band headshots and live performance images also stepped forward, strengthening the bonds in the room.

“I actually discovered local musician Zamzam through the Saudi Music Community when I was putting this together,” Tamtam said.

Zamzam, a frequent Bohemia performer and lover of all music genres, walked in as Tamtam was speaking about her. Zamzam, who also goes by a mononym, found the database through Tamtam’s initiative and was excited to meet her in person.

Both shrieked in delight on noticing they were face-to-face.

“Maybe we will have a Tamtam and Zamzam collaboration in the future,” someone said in the background.

“I added myself to the database!” Zamzam told Arab News. “I follow Tamtam and I saw the (Instagram) story about Goast Flower. Whenever I see a label or something that could be a creative hub, I want to connect.”

The venue itself played a role. Bohemia Cafe has become something of a beacon for alternative and indie creatives in the Eastern Province.

One of them, Fatima Falath, shared that she had written a song inspired by her visit to Bohemia.

“Two years ago, I was sitting at Bohemia and got inspired by the drawing on their cup,” Falath told Arab News.

“I had some matcha — even in the song we mentioned matcha,” Falath said with a laugh. “I sang and wrote the lyrics, and my friend and producer, who goes by Hajj Alibaba, did the background music. I made all my friends and family listen to it — it’s a driving-around-in-the-car song. I haven’t published it yet, but I’m inspired to publish it tonight at this event because we wrote it here.”

Everyone at Bohemia had a chance to listen to Falath’s creation for the very first time, and many other musicians joined after and played their songs.

Rohit Jayakaran of MDLBEAST Radio drove in from Riyadh to support the event along with Tamtam and the team. For nearly four hours, they were fired up to be there. He was beaming as the songs were being played.

“We’re very excited to be part of the Saudi music community and support it as MDLBEAST Radio,” Jayakaran told Arab News. “We believe that great things will come out of this community. Bohemia — this is the place where people come for music in Sharqiya. What I discovered today is that there is a community — and it’s a growing community. It’s eclectic. It has all sorts of dynamic energies in here. And it’s just really nice to have this here because it didn’t exist before. It’s amazing. It’s awesome.”

Jayakaran hopes that connections made will showcase their collaborative talents at the next live show at Bohemia, in Riyadh, or just in general.

For now, Goast Flower remains Tamtam’s personal label — though she doesn’t rule out signing other artists in the future.

“I really, really respect the artist. Unless I know I can invest a lot of money in the artist — money, time and effort — I’m not going to sign them,” she said. “A lot of the big people in this industry take advantage of artists. Artists don’t make enough money from streaming. The music business has a lot of work to do.”

She hopes that Saudi Arabia can do things differently.

“Saudi is such a special place right now because it’s the beginning of the music industry. We are in a place where we can shape it in a different way — we don’t have to copy the West. We can learn from the mistakes happening in other industries.”

Next, Goast Flower is headed to Jeddah, where they will host a similar activation on April 16 at Hayy Jameel.

It will essentially go from the heart of the Kingdom to the two coasts, like a hug to the music community in Saudi Arabia.


Highlights from Art Week Riyadh 

Updated 11 April 2025
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Highlights from Art Week Riyadh 

  • Selected works by some of the international artists participating in the inaugural edition of AWR, which runs until April 13 

Wael Shawky 

‘The Gulf Project Camp’ 

This work is part of the award-winning Egyptian artist’s ongoing titular series. Its full title is “The Gulf Project Camp (after ‘Hajj (Panoramic Overview of Makkah)’ by Andreas Magnus Hunglinger, 1803)” — a nod to its inspiration from the Austrian orientalist’s rare early-19th-century drawing of Islam’s holiest city. The project as a whole “investigates the Arabian Peninsula and its modern history through the lenses of migration, trade, petropolitics, religion and tribal alliances” and “sheds light on specific regional and historical moments: the Utub migration; the establishment of the Emirate of Diriyah, the first Saudi state; and the rise of Wahhabism,” according to a guidebook for the 2019 Sharjah Biennale. “Historical treaties, conferences, speeches and experiences of war are rendered in the artwork through imagery and the use of various industrial materials, such as tarmac, graphite and metal dust.” 

Anahita Razmi  

‘No National Flag Uses a Gradient #1’ 

Razmi is a German-born artist of Iranian and German descent whose practice, she has written, draws on her background to explore “contextual, geographical, and ideological shifts — with a focus on shifts between an ‘East’ and a ‘West.’” She added that she is interested in “a fluid, transcultural approach to contemporary art and its histories and references,” as well as “in work that is producing testing grounds for possibilities of import/export, hybrid identities, and the constructions and ambiguities of cultural representation.” This work was created in 2022 and is a perfect representation of those interests, seemingly representing the lack of room for nuance in nationalist symbols and rhetoric.  

Safwan Dahoul 

‘Dream 42’ 

This work forms part of the Syrian artist’s ongoing “Dream” series, which Dahoul began back in the 1980s. According to Ayyam Gallery, the series explores “the physical and psychological effects of alienation, solitude, and longing that punctuate the human experience at various stages in life.” “Dream 42,” however, is a notable departure from the earlier works in the series, which always featured a female protagonist, who often “takes on the form of a despairing woman in isolated interiors.” Her disappearance from this particular work “could be understood as her final transcendence of a stifling world,” the gallery wrote, noting that in later paintings she is depicted as “a sort of angel.” 

Neïl Beloufa  

‘Double Standard — canyon’ 

The French-Algerian artist and filmmaker’s works, according to Francois Ghebaly Gallery, address “themes of geopolitics, technology, urbanism, and ideology through layered projects that combine video, sculpture, social participation, and often dynamic processes like sensor activation or algorithmic control.” This particular piece, as the title suggests, is illustrative of Beloufa’s interest in dichotomies, such as reality and fiction, or presence and absence. “Combining dichotomies allows him to deconstruct our belief systems and presconceived ideas,” We Art Partners have written of Beloufa’s work. “He tries to confront his audience with his own stereotypes to demonstrate their unbelief.” The work is part of the artist’s “Double Standard” series, which forms, according to a catalogue from his solo exhibition in Basel’s Kunsthalle, “an aesthetic world expressed through gaming-inspired forms and the language of digital imagery.” 

Lamya Gargash  

‘Arches Light, Old Jubail Market, Sharjah, UAE’ 

The Emirati artist has long been inspired by inhabited and/or abandoned spaces, “as well as cultural heritage in a time of rapid change,” according to Dubai gallery The Third Line. In her photo series “Kun” (which translates as ‘To Be’), from which this work is taken, Gargash “connects the cities of Sharjah, Dubai, London and Bath through carefully curated gold draping gestures captured within each frame to create a unique bond,” Maraya Art Center’s catalogue for her solo exhibition there stated. “This draping, golden fabric is placed into various spaces, guided by the Qibla, a modified compass indicating the direction of prayer. Gargash uses the Qibla to symbolize direction, spirituality and unity. The gold fabric covers and conceals elements in its path; this inclusion breaks the silence of the still frame, drawing attention to focal points and bridging the gap between what is considered sacred and secular. 


Devastatingly good: ‘The Last of Us’ season two is a bleak triumph 

Updated 11 April 2025
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Devastatingly good: ‘The Last of Us’ season two is a bleak triumph 

JEDDAH: The key to the success of season one of HBO’s acclaimed post-apocalyptic video-game-franchise adaptation “The Last of Us” was the relationship between world-weary smuggler Joel (Pedro Pascal) and his ‘cargo,’ 14-year-old orphan Ellie (Bella Ramsey), who’s immune to the parasitic fungal infection that wiped out the majority of mankind over the previous two decades. 

In season two, which launches April 13 on OSN+, that relationship has become strained. In part because the now-19-year-old Ellie is raging against her father (-figure), as 19-year-olds will. But also due to the decisions Joel made in the season one finale (spoiler alert) — keeping Ellie alive by slaughtering dozens of people and possibly denying the world a cure.  

So fans hoping for a repeat of the crackling chemistry between Pascal and Ramsey that made up the majority of season one’s screen time will be disappointed there’s not more of it here: Ellie has made friends from her own age bracket in the relatively peaceful township of Jackson over the five years that have passed since season one and is now living in Joel’s garage, rather than the main house. It’s a big loss, not having Joel and Ellie at the heart of the show, and none of the other relationships fully compensate. 

However, once again showrunners Craig Mazin and Neil Druckmann (the latter of whom is also head of the games’ developer, Naughty Dog) have managed to navigate the line between satisfying fans of the games and viewers who know nothing of the story.  

The season begins slowly, establishing the new dynamics between Joel and Ellie, and introducing us to some of Jackson’s other inhabitants while showing that a functioning, peaceful community can still exist in an otherwise ruined world. Don’t get too cozy, though. We’re also introduced to Abby and her friends, who we quickly learn are survivors of Joel’s finale rampage out for vengeance. And they’re closing in on Jackson.  

The mellow vibe disappears fast. There’s an all-out battle against a horde of infected that compares favorably with the very best of “Game of Thrones,” and displays of narrative audacity that only very skilled writers and performers can successfully pull off and still retain their audience — or, at least, the majority (some will definitely decide not to stick with it).  

Like the game on which it’s based, season two is a different, darker, bleaker affair than the first, tackling topics that are rarely addressed in this genre: cycles of violence; the difference between justice and vengeance (or justice and selfishness); the destructive and constructive powers of love; the crushing devastation of grief; and much more. And, like the game, it’s a great piece of storytelling that rewards your attention.