“Pakistani Bureaucrats & The Booze Permit”—a story by Tariq Mehmood
Novelist and filmmaker Tariq Mehmood weaves a tale of wasta, women and booze in Rawalpindi.
Novelist and filmmaker Tariq Mehmood weaves a tale of wasta, women and booze in Rawalpindi.
Bethlehem chef Fadi Kattan recalls the disaster of wasta leading up to Christmas Eve at Fawda restaurant.
Novelist Samir El-Youssef recalls adolescent challenges and more recent experience where wasta was a necessity.
After surviving an Egyptian prison and obtaining asylum in the United States, Ahmed Naji contemplates wasta and standing in line.
In which C.S. Layla, the American daughter of a Jordanian professor, remembers life and wasta in the old country.
Victoria Schneider reports from Beirut on the new Wasta board game that satirizes corruption in Lebanon.
Lawrence Joffe on how the al-Assad and Makhlouf families have mastered the art of control and corruption in a country decimated by a decade of war.
Our correspondent in Tunis, Emna Mizouni, reports on the vaccination crisis exacerbated by wasta.
Myriam Gurba reviews a book that argues that some “white feminists accept the benefits conferred by white supremacy at the expense of people of color.”
Jenine Abboushi reviews the recent anthology of essays on socialism in the context of Palestinian resistance.
Malu Halasa reviews a new anthology of Arab women writers on sex, love and lust, including “the leading lights of modern Arab fiction: Hanan al-Shaykh, Adhaf Soueif, Leila Slimani and Adania Shibli.”
Rana Asfour reviews Faysal Khartash’s Roundabout of Death and Zeyn Joukhadar’s The Map of Salt and Stars.