Un vent d'indignation, de révolte vient de Tunisie...et fait le ménage, aspire la corruption, karchérise la dictature, décrasse 23 years of a "mafia" in place ... for the salvation of his people. Vendetta is the Tunisian. Tunisians, they are ready with pleasure a bit of the Marseillaise:
Come! Children of the fatherland!
The day of glory has arrived!
Against us, tyranny!
And especially a few of the "Protest Song"
How many years does it take to get to the mountain to the sea? How many years can a people exist before he get freedom? And how of times a man can turn his head and pretend it did not see anything? The answer, my friend, is carried by the wind, the answer is carried by the wind.
This storm Will it also "polish up", "refresh" the Algerian political? Egyptian?
From memory, I've never read a novel Tunisian, but a little literature is sometimes much better than long newspaper articles.
I warmly recommend Taxi of Khaled Alkhamissi. Egyptian journalist and filmmaker gives us a portrait of President Hosni Mubarak of Egypt through several conversations with taxi drivers in Cairo. Over the lines, often funny, touching and crammed with truth, one hears the cry of the people, rebellion rumbling quietly compartmentalized in cars. Men confide tell their troubled lives, pervasive corruption, poor quality of life, struggling to survive, the Islamization of the country, social injustice, freedom flouted. Conversations (without perhaps romanticized) feel the full experience nose. This book, well reviewed and sold, trafficked reads and teaches us as much as he entertains us.
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