Roberto Khatlab’s book was adapted into a graphic novel version by Jamile do Carmo.
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The first Arab immigrant in Brazil and the first Arabic newspaper in Latin America are some of the findings of the Project of Digitization of the Memory of the Arab Immigration to Brazil. Open for consultation since last year, the archive has 120,000 digitized pieces and has been used by researchers.
Researcher and writer Roberto Khatlab will talk about the history of resilience in the Arab country in a lecture on August 3 at the Monte Líbano Club.
Researcher Roberto Khatlab writes article on the creation of the Brazilian feijoada and the Arab yakhné, using historical facts to explain where they two meet.
In an article, professor Roberto Khatlab (pictured below) tells about the research he carried out, which led him to names that could be the first Lebanese to emigrate to Brazil and the first to return to Lebanon after living in Brazilian lands.
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.
The event ‘Arab Immigration to Brazil: Analysis and Interpretations’ is taking place next Monday (30) at 5 pm. Registration is open and the event is free.
Arabs immigrated seeking promising lives, commercial success and prosperity. As a result, they thrived and contributed to the country’s growth.
The Arab country and its academic interchange program will be topics of magna lecture that will launch the academic year in ESDHC and EMGE, law and engineering schools, respectively, in Belo Horizonte, Brazil this Friday (15).
The Holy Spirit University of Kaslik entered into an agreement with the Pontifical Catholic University in Campinas last week.
The writer and researcher Roberto Khatlab was awarded the Brazilian Army Medal in April.
The dean of Lebanon’s Holy Spirit University of Kaslik will deliver a lecture on May 3 to mark the start of an initiative to digitize the memory of Syrian-Lebanese migration to Brazil.