- Samer Raimouny
Samer Raimouny (Arabic: سامر الريموني) is an
Anglophone Jordan ianPoet and a Campaigner forChild Rights . He recited at the grand opening of the 2nd World Culture Forum and at the IPEC international day against child labor. He currently resides inParis where he is pursuing his Ph.D in International Relations à l'Université de laSorbonne . Disciplined in Commercial Arbitration and Conflict Resolution he worked in Investment Consultancy, Commercial mediation and conflict management as well as a presence in the intellectual circles as a poet campaigning for contemporary humanitarian issues.Born in
Damascus to Jordanian parents, his father, an industrialist and now retiredSenator fromJerash in northernJordan , his mother is anEnglish Literature Teacher from the city ofSalt he is the youngest of their four children.He launched his campaigns for
Human Rights awareness as defined by theUniversal Declaration of Human Rights in Jordan in January 2004 at a charity fundraiser for Cancer Treatment of patients in3rd World Countries his poem 'of Strength and Sakina' an ode to the internal strength of patients suffering from untreatable diseases and acknowledgment to the influence ofGibran Khalil Gibran on his choice of poetic form and structural inspiration. In March of the Same year, he recited another piece which has proven hard to digest in light of the then-ongoing American operations inIraq which was a no holds barred look atArab identity and the reflection of current events on its malformations, the poem is called 'Diaspora of the Soul: the Taboo of Allau Akbar' which he recited with a disclaimer beforehand but still was advised to refrain from further recitation of the said piece, he was further banned from reciting the same piece after his debut recital at theAmerican University of Beirut ,Lebanon . The piece contained logical scenarios to what was further coming to the region which audiences then were not ready to acknowledge but which now in retrospect has been unfortunately proved right with regards to Human Rights and Refugee issues.In June 2005, He recited at the
IPEC (International Programme for the Elimination of Child Labour) and theInternational Labour Organization (ILO)s' SCREAM (Supporting Children's Rights through Education, the Arts and the Media) project for theWorld Day against Child Labour . The Poem '11:30pm 2 bubblegums sold' looks at child labour from the prospective of a seven year old child selling gum at a traffic light and his contemplation of why he is there as opposed to the people he is trying to sell to.In December of the same year he recited at the
2nd World Cultural Forum Grand Opening Ceremonies, the theme being "investing in culture for social justice and development." his poem was instrumental to setting the mood of the forums workshops and was an introduction to Jordan as the location ofDavos World Economic Forum, his poem Green Palms... Ode to the Land describes Jordan as:Some say it is the
Holyland Others say it is the Middle East's lifeline. The paradigm of achievable expanses...While Others remain in doubt of all its realistic stances. Others not really forming an opinion... Not hot-spotted enough to be given their glances.a review by a Jordanian Daily
Ad-Dustour Newspaper Cultural editor describes Raimouny's writing as:" ... Makes a point ... logical, progressive and well structured one feels of its importance, no doubt that it is in English for an Audience mainly of Europeans… debuting on the literary scene in full expressive and creative force, with an ability to read symbolisms, decipher cryptics and address them with unique form that is very well palatable ..." translated from the original
Arabic :سـامـر الريمـوني ... " يحدد موقفـا ً ... منطـقيا ً و تقدمـيا ً عقلانيـا ً يشـعر المرء بضرورتـه ، لا وسيما أنه ناطقا ً بالإنجليزية أمام جمهور أغلبيته من الأوروبيين ... مقبلا ً على المشهد الثقافي بطاقة الإبداع وقوته ، يقرأ الرسائل ويلتقط الإشارات و يعيد توجيهها بعد هضمها في ثوبٍ مختلف لكنه مقبول جدا
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