The video documentary to be screened on June 12 in Ramallah mixes contemporary footage with the account of the Brazilian emperor on his visit to Palestine. The event will also feature a photo exhibit.
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Exhibition features photographs from the trip of the Brazilian emperor to Egypt and can be seen until January 17 in the Bibliotheca Alexandrina. Entrance is free.
A visit Pedro II paid to the Holy Land in the 19th century will be the subject of a meeting on November 27 at the National Gallery of Fine Arts in Jordan.
An exhibition presenting the visits of the Brazilian emperor to the Arab countries in the nineteenth century will open on September 21 in Lebanon. It will feature photographs, documents and newspaper articles. A conference will take place on September 29.
With over 270 items, exhibition Desvairar 22 showcases a sarcophagus, pictures of D. Pedro II’s expedition to Egypt, and popular songs. You can also find works by Modernists such as Tarsila do Amaral as well as new-generation artists.
Brazilian Ivna Chedier Maluly, of Lebanese descent, launches a book that mixes passages from the history of the Brazilian empire with fiction. The work came from the writer’s experiences in the gardens of the Imperial Museum, in the city of Petrópolis, in her childhood.
The academic, writer, and poet has been a professor for 20 years at Sorbonne in Paris and dedicates to researching and disseminating the similarities between migratory flows, including Arabs in Brazil.
The show “+140 Years of Lebanese Presence in Brazil” will feature a trove of unpublished material with photos, maps, and commemorative stamp collections. Opening is next Monday (6).
The exhibition features a collection of pictures from Egypt dating back to the 19th century. These images were acquired by emperor Pedro II during his visits to Cairo in 1871 and 1876.
Arabs immigrated seeking promising lives, commercial success and prosperity. As a result, they thrived and contributed to the country’s growth.
The visits of the Brazilian emperor to the Middle East and North Africa in the 19th century will be addressed by researcher Roberto Khatlab, who wrote a book on the subject.