al-Thaqāfah al-Islāmīyah fī al-Hind is a religion & spirituality first published in 1958 by the mid-20th-century author Sayyid ʻAbdulḥaʼī. Indexed in KitabiHub under Religion & Spirituality, The Arab World, Modern Arabic Fiction, it sits alongside other religion & spirituality on the same shelf.
Like much of the Arabic literary tradition, al-Thaqāfah al-Islāmīyah fī al-Hind rewards close reading: its rhythms reach back to a thousand years of poetry and rhetoric, while its concerns — exile, memory, the city, the desert, the relationship between the writer and the political moment — speak directly to the present. Readers approaching the book without prior background will find the description above a useful entry point; those already familiar with Sayyid ʻAbdulḥaʼī's work will recognise the recurring preoccupations.
This page is part of the KitabiHub catalogue of Arabic-language literature. From here you can follow the author link to see Sayyid ʻAbdulḥaʼī's full bibliography on the site, jump to any of the categories above to browse adjacent works, or return to the main library to keep exploring. Cover image and bibliographic metadata are sourced from the open catalogues described on our sources page.
If you found this record useful, KitabiHub indexes hundreds more titles across novels, poetry, short fiction, drama, and essays — all originally written in Arabic, all by Arab authors. The catalogue is rebuilt regularly so newly-indexed titles upstream eventually appear here too.
About the author
Sayyid ʻAbdulḥaʼī is part of the long Arabic literary tradition catalogued on KitabiHub. Their work appears alongside the great voices of the Nahda renaissance, the Cairo realists of the mid-twentieth century, and the new generation of writers from across the Arab world.
→ See the full bibliography of Sayyid ʻAbdulḥaʼī





