The landmark symposium "Classical Arabic Thought in Contemporary Global Research" commenced today under the joint patronage of:
Kuwait's National Council for Culture, Arts and Letters (NCCAL)
French Research Center for the Arabian Peninsula (CEFREPA)
Dar al-Athar al-Islamiyyah (Islamic Antiquities Museum)
Keynote Addresses:
Aisha Al-Mahmoud (NCCAL Assistant Secretary-General):
Hailed the event as pivotal for Kuwait's role as 2025 Arab Culture Capital
Noted a "qualitative renaissance" in classical Arabic studies, moving beyond textual preservation to:
✓ Modern analytical frameworks
✓ Socio-historical contextualization
✓ Interdisciplinary methodologies
Highlighted participation of scholars from diverse generations/institutions
French Ambassador Olivier Guyonneau:
Emphasized Franco-Kuwaiti cooperation in heritage preservation
Revealed:
✦ 7,000+ uncataloged Arabic manuscripts in France's National Library alone
✦ Ongoing efforts in manuscript digitization/translation
Praised Kuwait's historic role in intercultural dialogue
Dr. Pierre Caye (French Institute of Islamic Studies):
Stressed the conference's role in:
✓ Renewing humanistic knowledge
✓ Bridging civilizational understanding
✓ Developing new philological approaches
Academic Focus:
The 3-day program features specialized sessions on:
Manuscript cataloging/textual criticism
Reinterpretations of major Arabic philosophical works
Scientific heritage in Islamic civilization
Comparative studies with European scholastic traditions
Notable Participation:
Dr. Reem Al-Radini (Kuwait University):
Cited "explosive growth" in Arabic thought studies since 2000
Highlighted need for systematic assessment of this scholarly phenomenon
Context:
The conference aligns with:
Kuwait's 2025 cultural capital agenda
UNESCO's Decade of Indigenous Languages (2022-2032)
Growing global interest in Islamicate knowledge systems
Next Steps:
Expected outcomes include:
Franco-Arab research partnerships
Digital humanities initiatives
Critical editions of unpublished manuscripts