Buku Teks
Di Lembah sungai Nil
"His body is an animal body and his head is human. That is indeed the essence of man himself. His head is full of thoughts, but he is no more than other animals. He wants to eat and drink, wants to own, and also wants to procreate. However, he is human because he thinks and those thoughts are lodged in his head, a head that is full of sin. So the animality that is below can be controlled by his head so that there is a struggle for life to dominate and possess."
"How great and terrible it was at that time. Women, driven by the spirit of independence for their homeland, paraded on the streets, thousands of people. There was no fatwa forbidding them because the al-Azhar clerics themselves also held processions in other places. They also violated customs, traditions and customs. The clerics went to give sermons, in the Coptic church they held speeches, in the mosque they called for unity against colonialism."
Pyramids, sphinxes, desert. It will definitely lead us to imagine Egypt in all its splendor. But what if we delve into the beauty of Egypt in the 1950s? Political turmoil, the women's movement, and the development of education. Hamka presents Egypt as the main dish in this book. A gift from the Nile, that's how the people of Egypt and even the world express their admiration for the Land of the Pyramids. How was the Nile River able to carry human life around it so that it was able to build an unrivaled civilization? What did Hamka see that made him fall in love with the Land of the Pyramids?
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