Assahafa.com
As Sunday draws the curtain on this year’s edition of the International Publishing and Book Fair (SIEL) in Rabat, the fair closes after ten days that reshaped the city into a dense meeting point for books, ideas, and shared conversations.
Across its halls, the rhythm rarely slowed. Publishers from different horizons, writers, researchers, and cultural actors circulated between stands where new releases met long-standing works, and where reading habits found a sense of continuity and change.
What occurred throughout the fair was not limited to book displays but also extended into public exchange, where literature became a gateway to broader discussions of society, memory, and contemporary questions.
This edition drew a notably wide public. Families moved through the spaces together, children took part in tailored programs, and schools brought younger readers into contact with storytelling formats that often sit outside the classroom.
These moments gave the fair a layered character, where reading met interpretation, and where curiosity shaped interaction as much as formal presentation.
Women’s voices held a visible place throughout the program, in panel discussions and in literary encounters that examined writing, publishing, and social experience from varied perspectives.
Alongside them, debates linked to rights, civic space, and cultural responsibility introduced a dimension that extended beyond literature itself, touching on how books interact with public life.
Human rights institutions and cultural bodies also contributed to this edition through discussions and activities that placed dignity, access to knowledge, and civic awareness within the broader cultural agenda.
These exchanges added another layer to a fair that continues to position itself not only as a literary event, but as a space where society observes itself through dialogue.
As visitors gradually left the venue and the stands began to close, what remains is less a sense of conclusion than of continuation.
The ten days leave behind new readings, encounters, and questions that will likely extend well beyond the fairgrounds. In that sense, the event closes its doors while the conversations it carried remain open, carried forward by readers, writers, and all those who passed through its space.
Source: Morocco word news













