Life lessons from inspirational women: Abeer Nehme

Abeer Nehme is a Lebanese singer and a musicologist. (Supplied)
Updated 14 August 2018
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Life lessons from inspirational women: Abeer Nehme

What I love most about my work is that it reflects my true nature. And it has allowed me to travel and meet people of different cultures. Music is my passport and it enables me to deliver a message and express ideas that any other language would have failed to deliver. I feel like my music is making a difference and spreading joy, hope and beauty.

Because I’ve traveled a lot and worked on a series of documentaries — “Ethnopholia: Music of the People” — I’ve met a lot of people who are not particularly famous, but who carry music in their hearts and lives. They have had a great influence on me as a person and as an artist. I feel so lucky to have met them. Along with my friends, they are like guardian angels. I believe every person we meet leaves their fingerprint in one way or another.

My list of musical influences is long. But it starts with my father. He had a great voice and also played the lute. He introduced me to traditional Oriental modal music when I was very young. That’s how my journey started.

Professionally, my biggest regret is the opportunities I maybe missed because I lacked maturity. But I consider all my experiences to be lessons, rather than regrets.

Personally, I regret not spending enough time with precious people like my mom, dad and siblings. I regret the time I did not spend with people who were so close to my heart and who unfortunately passed away. I cannot go back in time and make up for that.

As a woman in the music industry, the biggest challenge I’ve faced with men was to keep things professional and preserve boundaries. But sometimes men are actually easier to deal with than women.

I believe things are starting to change in our society, and women are starting to be more valued and appreciated. Women have a very important role to play: We are the symbol of life, of earth. We perpetuate life. What is more important than that?

Women should be given more opportunities in the political field. Men have been ruling the world so far and all we’ve seen is war, violence, bitterness… I believe women can come up with important changes if they could take political decisions. We have a strong ability to multitask, and endurance that exceeds that of men. I’m not saying men are less important, but women should be given more chances.


Creators spotlight graphic novels as powerful literacy tools at Dubai literature festival

Updated 22 January 2026
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Creators spotlight graphic novels as powerful literacy tools at Dubai literature festival

DUBAI: Comic creators Jamie Smart, John Patrick Green and Mo Abedin joined the Emirates Airline Festival of Literature in Dubai this week to discuss the growing role of comics in classrooms and how graphic novels are reshaping children’s relationship with reading.

Smart is the author of the bestselling “Bunny vs. Monkey” series, Green is known for his popular “The InvestiGators” books about crime-solving alligators, and Abedin is the UAE-based creator of the sci-fi graphic novel “Solarblader."

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

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A key point shared by all three speakers was that comics should be valued as a complete art form rather than a stepping stone to prose. Abedin described comics as “a very high art form,” explaining that the medium taught readers how to process complex ideas such as emotion, empathy and culture through visual storytelling. 

He added that comics allowed readers to slow down and engage on their own terms because “the reader is also able to control the pace of the narrative.”

For Smart, the power of comics lies in the emotional connection they create. He spoke about how the word “comics” immediately takes him back to childhood, recalling being “eight years old and going down the newsagent” and spending hours reading. That sense of joy, he said, is what many reluctant readers respond to. He noted that parents often tell him, “My child would not read a book, a single book … until they picked up a comic,” adding that comics inform readers even when they are simply entertaining. “They can just be an emotional, heartfelt story,” he said.

Green focused on how comics function as a visual language that readers learn over time. He described them as “almost a separate language,” noting that some adults struggle at first because they are unsure how to read a page — whether to follow images or text. But that flexibility is what gives comics their strength, allowing readers to choose how they experience a story and giving them more agency than prose or film.

The panel also discussed re-reading as a powerful part of the comics experience. Children often race through a book for the plot, then return to notice visual details, background jokes and character expressions, building deeper comprehension with each reading.

By the end of the session, all three agreed that comics should be studied and respected as their own form of literature — one that welcomes readers of all levels, builds confidence and makes reading feel like discovery rather than obligation.