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Hashas on Moroccan Public TV1 AL Oula
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9EYnIgoijuI&t=9s محمد حصحاص على القناة الأولى المغربية برنامج إشعاع مملكة Mohammed Hashas on Moroccan Public TV1 Al Oula, Ichaa Mamlaka programme, 30 November 2025 ENGLISH I was pleased to appear among a few Moroccan professionals on Moroccan public TV1 Al-Oula, for the programme Radiation of a Monarchy/Radiation of a Diaspora/“Ichaa Mamlaka”, on 30 November 2025, 22:30H. -The full episode is in 52 minutes in Arabic: https://forja.ma/content/guftdlxaqkrjnksnljbmbqmachqxcwqswktcptdc?c2=6&play=false -The testimony of Lucia in Italian and Arabic transcript appears on minutes 27:10-29:15. -I am covered in total 11-12 minutes, on minutes 26:00-36:00, besides one minute in the initial programme. ARABIC العربية كان من دواعي سروري أن أظهر مع عدد قليل من المهنيين…
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Hashas speaks at Dartmouth College on “Rabat School”, Hanover, 05 November 2025
Mohammed Hashas, “Thinking from the edge of the Islamicate: Contemporary Rabat School,” Dartmouth College, Hanover, 04 November 2025
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Hashas talks to Afikra Podcast on Rabat School
Who are the giants of contemporary Moroccan philosophy? | Prof Mohammed Hashas Premiered Aug 18, 2025 🎙️ The afikra PodcastWe delve into the need to fill the literary and intellectual gap in Moroccan scholarship, the impacts of notable contemporary Moroccan philosophers and thinkers, and how their ideas engage with local, regional, and global issues like modernity, democracy, and human rights. Dr Mohammed Hashas is an assistant professor at the University of Rome Tor Vergata and discusses his new book on contemporary Moroccan thought, which focuses on philosophy, theology, society, and culture. He shares his academic journey and personal experiences that led to the creation of this comprehensive work. 0:00 Introduction…
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“Al-Hashas”: On Identity and Origins of the Name
“Al-Hashas”: On Identity and Origins of the Name Names reflect history and memory. They are containers of traditions, of hopes and aspirations. This applies to my name as well, my family name in focus here (and we leave my first name, and the family name of my mother, “Azirār” which is Amazigh and literally means “Tall/Long”, for another occasion). My name is poetic when read and pronounced in Arabic, composed of a repeated syllable, the vowel of the second is long, “ā”, written in the Arabic version as an “alif” but not visible in the Latin one: “has-has” – [transliterated as “ḥaṣḥāṣ”] – and not “ha-shas” as it is often…