Fawzia Abd Al-Minem Al-Ashmawi (
Arabic:
فوزية العشماوي) is an Egyptian academic, writer and translator. She works as a Professor of Arabic Literature and Islamic Civilisation in the
University of Geneva. She had won the Golden Award in Sciences and Arts from
Egypt.[1][2]
Early life
Al-Ashmawi was born in October in the 1940s in
Alexandria. Her mother was Egyptian with
Syrian roots, and her father was Alexandrian from Al-Siyala neighbourhood in Ras Al-Teen district. She has two sisters and two brothers. She went to a
convent school during primary school, and she went to
Alexandria University where she studied in the Department of French Language in the College of Arts, from which she graduated in 1965. Abd Al-Aziz Abu Zaid was a colleague of hers, who proposed to her after she graduated, then they got married afterwards.[2]
In the summer of 1972, when she was in her thirties, Al-Ashmawi left Egypt for the first time in her life and headed to Switzerland. Her husband had already left six months earlier before she and her two children followed. Al-Ashmawi continued her studies in social sciences there until she graduated from the College of Arts at University of Geneva in June 1972. Continuing her studies, she received her MA in 1974, and her PhD in 1983 in Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences. Her MA thesis was about
Prophet Mohammed’s personality in French Literature, while her PhD dissertation was Woman and Modern Egypt in the Work of
Naguib Mahfuz[1].[2]
Al-Ashmawi worked as a translator and counsellor in some bodies of the United Nations in Switzerland, and for
ISESCO and
UNESCO. She also worked as a cultural counsellor in the Embassy of
Saudi Arabia, then for that of the
United Arab Emirates in Geneva. She got promoted from the position of an assistant professor to become the Head of the Arabic Language and Islamic Studies Department in
University of Geneva.[1][2]
Positions
Head of the Arabic Language and Islamic Studies Department in University of Geneva[2][3]
Counsellor in the United Nations in Switzerland[2]
Cultural counsellor for the Embassy of Saudi Arabia in Geneva[1][2]
Cultural counsellor for the Embassy of the United Arab Emirates in Geneva[1][2]
President of the European Muslim Women Forum[1][3][4]
Secretary General of the Swiss-Egyptian Cultural Association[1][3]
Senior Researcher for ISESCO in
Rabat,
Morocco, 2005; project: The Image of Islam in European Textbooks[1][2]
Senior Researcher for UNESCO in Paris 2007; project: The Image of the Other in History Textbooks | 2006; project: The Evolution of Muslim Women (Encyclopedia of
Islam)[1][2]
Works
She has authored publications in three languages:
Arabic
Waves of Life between the Alexandrian Sea and
Lake Geneva (Original title: Amwaj Al-'Umur bain Bahr Al-Iskandariya wa Buhairat Jenef), Dar el-ain Publications, Cairo, 2012[1][2]
Muslim Women in the OccidentMedia (Original title: Al-Mar’a Al-Muslima fì Al-`Ilam Al-Gharbi), Akhbar al-youm, Cairo, 2008[1]
Islamic Values and Humanitarian Values (Original title: Al-Qiyam Al-Islamiyya wa al-Qiyam Al-Insaniyya), Doha Conference, Qatar, 2007[1]
Women in Naguîb Mahfuz Novels (Original title: Al-Maraa fî Adab Naguib Mahfuz), General Egyptian Organisation of book & Superior Council of Culture, Cairo, 2003[1][2][5]
The Seven Monks of Alexandria (Original title: Al-Saba` Banât fî Al-Iskandiriyya), Sharqiyyat, Cairo, 1998[1]
Al-Hub Al-Awal wa Al-Suhba, (translation from French short story Premier Amour of Samuel Beckett), Superior Council of Culture, Cairo, 1998[1][6]
Muslim Voices in Switzerland, TSER Project, Brussels, 1999[1]
Comparative Study of Textbooks: The Image of the Other in Seven Mediterranean Countries, UNESCO Publications, Newsletter No 5, 1996[1]
French
Mariage et Divorce dans l’Egypte Ancienne (translation from Arabic of Marriage and Divorce in Ancient Egypt), Geuthner, Paris,2009[1][2]
Mohammad, Prophète de Dieu (The Prophet Mohammed), (translation from Arabic), WICS Publications, Tripoli, 2005[1]
L’Islam dans les manuels scolaires en Europe (Islam in History Textbooks), WICS Publications, Tripoli, 2003[1][6]
La Condition des Musulmans en Suisse (Muslims Status in Switzerland), CERA, Geneva, 2001[1][6]
Etude Comparative des manuels scolaires des pays méditerranéens (Comparative Study of History Textbooks in Mediterranean Countries), UNESCO, Paris, 1996[1]
L’Authenticité dans l’oeuvre romanesque de Naguib Mahfouz (The Authenticity in Naguib Mahfouz’ Novels), Revue of Arts & Translation, No 1, Kaslik, Liban, 1995[1][6]
La tragédie de Voltaire: Mahomet ou le Fanatisme ( Mahomet, The Fanaticism of Voltaire), in Campus, Geneva, 1994[1]
Miramar (translation from the Arabic novel
Miramar by Naguib Mahfuz), Denoël, Paris, 1990[1][2][6]
La Femme et l’Egypte Moderne dans l’oeuvre de Naguib Mahfouz (Woman and Modern Egypt in Naguib Mahfuz Novels), Labor & Fides, Geneva, 1985[1][2][6]
Awards
Golden Award in Sciences and Arts from Egypt (Wissam Al-Istihqaq min Al-Daraja Al-Ula fi Al –`Ulum wa Al-Funun)[1]