Wajnat Mostafa Mohamed
prominent Egyptian writer
Wajnat Mostafa Mohamed
(One of the most important founders of the AITG , AeehPress and i-sole Group of Companies)
I hold a degree from a commercial technical institute. I didn’t start writing to document; I began writing to understand. For me, words were a puzzle charged with emotions, not just letters. When I joined the AITG-EGYPT-Earth Treasures team under the supervision of Dr. Mohamed Fayad and team leader Sumaya Awad, I discovered that words were treated as conscious beings, not merely tools. My perspective changed completely. I didn’t write to convey a feeling; I wrote to uncover the true intention behind each word.
Biography
I hold a degree from a commercial technical institute. I didn’t start writing to document; I began writing to understand. For me, words were a puzzle charged with emotions, not just letters. When I joined the AITG-EGYPT-Earth Treasures team under the supervision of Dr. Mohamed Fayad and team leader Sumaya Awad, I discovered that words were treated as conscious beings, not merely tools. My perspective changed completely. I didn’t write to convey a feeling; I wrote to uncover the true intention behind each word.
My task was not easy; I encountered words I had heard without thinking, such as “harm,” “assault,” “robbery,” and “conflict.” However, within the team, we didn’t take words at face value; we asked ourselves, what are they striving for?
I began writing articles revealing that:
Harm is not a reaction; it is an attempt to resist pain through transgression. Yet, it always fails because it exacerbates the wound rather than heals it.
Assault does not arise from a void; it is often a means of asserting power, but its hidden goal is injustice and defense, not resolution.
Robbery initially seemed to me like a search for need, but what I discovered is that its aim is often violation rather than possession.
The conflict appeared chaotic, yet it always carried a deep call for negotiation, as if it were searching for a formula for peace amidst the noise.
Our mission was different; we didn’t write for immediate impact but instead began to delve into the words people use daily without realizing the effects these words have on them. I chose to engage with the most impactful words on a personal level: harm, assault, robbery, and conflict.
I placed every apparent goal on the dissection table and asked:
Is this the actual objective? Does it produce a beneficial effect, or does it conceal a greater harm?
I relied on real-world examples from politics, society, art, and even the biographies of global figures to illustrate that apparent goal can be deceptive, and the impact of a word is not measured by its immediate resonance but by what it produces.
I am now in a new phase within the team, working to understand the quality markers in words:
When is a word constructive? When is it destructive?
How do we uncover chaos when meanings become muddled?
How do we rearrange vocabulary to serve humanity rather than weaponize it?
I aspire to continue this journey, not just as a writer but as a critical reader of everything said. Language has the power to construct a new reality if we understand its purposes and free it from momentary impulses, reconnecting it with meaning, intention, and identity.
I have co-authored a series of four volumes, each detailing the impact and quality factors of individual words, as well as their connotations, totaling four volumes. Additionally, I have co-authored seven volumes on any harm, with more to come.
The beginning was unlike any traditional experience; we learned to treat words as living beings with paths and objectives. We began by stripping words of their superficial layers and deconstructing their apparent meanings to uncover the ultimate goal behind them. We didn’t just write; we deconstructed, analyzed, and confronted misleading interpretations with intellectual courage.
During my time with the AITG-EGYPT-NEW team, I participated in writing and analyzing a series of thought-provoking articles that focused on deconstructing concepts and revealing the ultimate intent behind each word or action. This series aimed to expose the superficial meaning of words and delve into their true essence. Some of the notable articles I contributed to include:
“The Image: When Identity is the Goal”
An article asserts that every image, regardless of its apparent purposes, ultimately aims to construct an identity—whether personal, collective, or commercial.
“The Revolution: Continuity and Radical Change, Not Momentary Aesthetics”
The analysis demonstrates that the profound purpose of any revolution is not decoration or beautification but the achievement of continuity and radical transformation in the structure of reality rather than superficial restoration.
“Seizure: When the Goal is the Seizure Itself”
A critical study illustrates that all forms of seizure, whether of land, ideas, or power, fundamentally seek seizure as an end in itself, not as a means to achieve justice or order.
“Boycott: Conscious Avoidance, Not Passive Escape”
An article demonstrates that a boycott is not an emotional reaction or a sign of weakness but rather a behavior aimed at consciously avoiding harm and building alternatives that express a genuine stance.
“The Uprising: Reform, Not Anger”
This approach demonstrates that an uprising should not merely express anger; it must strive for genuine reform that envisions the future rather than simply rejecting the past.
Each article in this series was the result of collective research and analysis within a team committed to uncovering the ultimate purpose of every word or action, to establish conscious, critical writing that relies on the depth of concepts rather than their surface.
I then moved on to writing articles that focus on the impact of goals, analyzing each goal presumed to be an end in itself from various angles, ultimately revealing whether it achieves a real effect or leads to opposite outcomes. I relied on real examples and global scenarios to connect concepts to living models.
As I continue to evolve, I am currently engaged in a new phase focusing on quality indicators associated with words. How do we distinguish between a beneficial word and a chaotic one? How do we recognize confusion when words intermingle without standards? This phase aims to establish conscious writing governed by thought rather than impulsive emotion.
We aim to develop this comprehensive intellectual project globally, reshaping our approach to language in media, education, and daily dialogue. I aspire to be part of a team that establishes new intellectual standards in writing based on genuine purpose and profound meaning rather than superficial beauty or fleeting excitement.
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