Leila Barclay

Leila Khoury Barclay is an American storyteller, journalist and founder of Al-Hakawati ("The Storyteller"), an online provider dedicated to educating people on Arabic art, culture and history,[1] in 2002.[2] The site has been featured on Radio Orient in Paris, France and has also been used for teaching purposes in the Arabic department at the University of Pennsylvania.[1]

Early life and career

Born and raised in Beirut, Lebanon to an Iraqi mother and Palestinian father,[1] Barclay had lived in Lebanon up until the Lebanese civil war began, leaving her to continue her studies in London.[1] She later moved to the United States and gained both a bachelor's degree in Mathematics and a master's degree in German literature from the Bryn Mawr College in Pennsylvania.[2] Soon after she returned to Lebanon after graduating in 1982 and worked as a journalist in Beirut between the years 1982 to 1984 and produced a first issue entertainment guide for Lebanon; however, it failed to be published due to the circumstance of war.[2]

Whilst returning to the States, she married David Barclay, whom she met at university. They both settled in New Jersey raising their four children.[1]

gollark: You could actually do something about homelessness or whatever. Most people could. Capitalism mostly aggregates people's preferences into results, ish. But most people do not seem to care about poverty/homelessness enough to act on it, beyond sometimes saying that if you go along with [DRASTIC CHANGE TO ENTIRE ECONOMIC/SOCIAL/POLITICAL SYSTEM] the whole problem will magically evaporate.
gollark: Produce a thing people like, sell it, and obtain cashmoney.
gollark: Or you can just offer a thing people like.
gollark: ...
gollark: Well, you might want workers in general to unionize if you think it means better outcomes generally.

References

  1. "A cyber-platform for Arab culture". First Jordan. Archived from the original on 7 July 2011. Retrieved 21 April 2020.
  2. "Al-hakawati officers and management". Al-hakawati. Archived from the original on 24 December 2008. Retrieved 21 April 2020.
  • al-hakawati
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