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Ben Salem Himmich

Ben Salem Himmich (born in 1947) is a novelist, poet and philosopher who teaches at the Mohammed V University, Rabat in Morocco.
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He has published 26 books, both literary and scientific works, in Arabic and French. As a liberal philosopher, Himmich is concerned with matters including ideological education in Islam. He advocates the division of church and state. His work deals with the problems and conflicts with which Morocco is faced today. [edit]References

1. ^ Simon Gikandi, Encyclopedia of African Literature, ed. Taylor & Francis, 2003 ISBN 9780415230193, p. 310 [edit]Books

De la formation idologique en Islam Le Calife de l'pouvante (Le serpent plumes) The Polymath, ed.: American University in Cairo

Au pays de nos crises [edit]Awards

Bensalem Himmich won the prize of the critics (1990) for his novel le fou du pouvoir, a book elected by the Arab union of writers as one of the hundred best books of the 20th century.

He also won the prize Charika of the Arab culture of jury composed of UNESCO and well known literary personalities.

Ben Salem Himmich also won the Naguib Mahfouz Medal for Literature for his book Al'Allamah (2001; "The Polymath" a book about the great Arab writer Ibn Khaldoun) (The award was established in 1996 and awarded for the best contemporary novel published in Arabic. The winning work is translated into English and published in Cairo, London, and New York.) Al-Ahram 19 - 25 December 2002, Issue No. 617, "Ibn Khaldun resurrected, Amina Elbendary attends the Mahfouz Award Ceremony at AUC" [1] (retrieved Feb. 15, 2009)

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