Mostafa Saadeq Al-Rafe'ie
Author
1880 – 1937
Who was Mostafa Saadeq Al-Rafe'ie?
Mostafa Saadeq Al-Rafe'i.e. was an Egyptian poet of Lebanese origin, born in Egypt in 1 January 1880, and died in May 1937 in Tanta, Egypt.
Mostafa Saadeq Al-Rafe'i.e. became deaf after contracting typhoid fever. Despite his hearing disability and the fact that he was self-taught, he became one of the most famous Arab poets of the early twentieth century. He composed the words of the Egyptian national anthem Eslami ya Misr, adopted between 1923 and 1936. The words of the Tunisian national anthem are largely the work of Al-Rafe'ie.
Mustafa Sadiq Abdul Razak bin Said bin Ahmed bin Abdul Qader Al-Rafii was born in the house of his maternal grandfather in the village of "Bahteem" Qalubia in the first and lived his life in Tanta. Belongs to the School Governors a lattice affiliated school of classical poetry title miracle Arabic literature. And his father served as the religious judiciary in many regions of Egypt and was the last work of his is the legitimate President of the Court of Tanta. As the mother of Syria El Rafeay was born as his father and when her father was Sheikh Toukhy, a traveling merchant convoys trade between Egypt and the Levant, and native of Aleppo, and his stay in Bahtim Qaliubiya villages, and had a menial.
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